#1 Tip How To Wear An Oversized Print If You’re Petite
As a petite woman I normally shy away from prints that are oversized as they can overwhelm my small frame.
Ha ha!
NOT!

I’m like a moth to a flame when I see crazy oversized prints.
I saw this dress almost two months ago in the consignment store and loved it then. It was too large and pricey so I walked away. I was surprised when I returned recently to find it still there and reduced by 50%. The dress had waited patiently for my return.
The artsy print reminds me of a Salvador Dalí painting. What is more fabulous than wearing a painting?
I know what you’re all thinking…
“Wearing a painting while holding a litter of baby pugs while Matthias Schoenaerts hand feeds me dark chocolate!”
but come on guys, I couldn’t hold a whole litter of baby pugs.
I’d try though.
Oh yes, I’d try.

This is another one of those tent or A-line dresses that I normally steer clear of as it can add visual weight to my body but the artsy print persuaded me to look past that.
I took the dress up through the shoulders which helped reduce the size of the arm holes. It made it a little bit shorter, which I might regret come spring, (which has yet to show up here BTW…we had a blizzard on Sunday!) but for now it is perfect with some dark tights. If need be I can simply rip out the stitches come Spring. I didn’t cut any of the dress. It was a quick fix rather than taking it in down the side seams. When it comes to sewing I’m gifted lazy like that.
I’ve layered a cardigan under for some much needed warmth on the arms.
Someone get Mother Nature on the phone STAT. Snow in April should be illegal.
The person that brought this dress to the consignment store cut out all the labels. Including the one that tells me how to clean the garment.
Why?
I friggin’ hate it when people do that!
Now it’s a guessing game as to how I should be washing this. It had better not be another issue like I had here. Once was more than enough.
Wearing heels and tights creating one long lean lower line helps to minimize the tent-like properties of this dress.
I was going to write the fact that the dress is shorter and the print doesn’t cover all of my body ensures that the print doesn’t overwhelm my frame but then I remembered this outfit…
And this…

So forget that tip.
My #1 no fail tip on how to wear an oversized print if you’re petite is…
Wear some kind of heel and strut around like you own the place. Confident people can wear whatever the heck they want.
Linking up with Turning Heads Tuesday, I Will Wear What I Like, My Whims Wednesday, What I Wore, Throwback Thursday, 52 Pick-me-up
Dare To Wear Red
Do you dare to wear red over 40?
Red empowers, red invites, red rules.
The Woman In Red
What do you associate with that statement other than this movie clip , this song or this image?
My views on wearing the colour red were formed at a very young age.
When I was eleven I had to wear a red uniform to work. I worked in an ice cream shop my parents owned. I despised that uniform. This undoubtably tainted my perception of the colour red. After many years of scooping ice cream, cleaning popcorn machines and carefully stabbing hot dogs onto a rotating wheel, red to me signified manual labour and hiding my true self behind a uniform. I hated looking like my coworkers.
From then on I never bought any red clothes.
About eight years later, a Japanese tour guide gifted me a red dress when I worked as the director of guest services at a high end hotel. Each time his tour groups would visit the hotel I would greet them and he often brought me gifts and cards back from his travels. I never saw him outside of my work environment but I’ve kept the dress all these years. I don’t believe I’ve ever worn the dress outside of the house.
The dress looks a whole lot like this… so now you know why I didn’t wear it out of the house.
For many years I never owned anything red other than that dress. It was a shameful colour.
I felt much like the woman in the first image, exposed wearing red.
Once I became a redhead I still didn’t feel I could wear red. I was older, more confident, but I still held onto nagging beliefs attached to memories of red.
Then I saw Joan in MadMen and that changed the whole red ballgame for me.
Joan opened my eyes to the power of red. She was confident, intelligent and commanding. Cloaked in red Joan’s fierce super powers were unstoppable.
Joan wore red because she earned it.
Dare To Wear Red
Slowly and insidiously red started creeping back into my life and my closet.
When I saw this dress at the vintage show I was drawn to the cut immediately but still hesitated because it was red.
Could I pull it off? Would it clash with my hair, my personality, my life?
Red isn’t for wallflowers. Red is the colour of blood, love and hate. Red isn’t soft or quiet. Red rages and screams. Red is passion, frenzy and excitement. Red rules the room.

I’m no longer the teenager wearing my uniform scooping ice cream or the young woman accepting spicy gifts from foreign men. I’m a mature woman and every choice I’ve made in my life has brought me to where I am.
I’ve earned this red.
I own this red.
I am a woman in red, see me soar.
Reclaiming your power over long held personal perceptions is extremely gratifying and liberating.
What do you need to reclaim?
Linking up with Visible Monday, I Will Wear What I Like, Turning Heads Tuesday
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