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How to Plan Outfits Around Your Body Type TL;DR: Custom outfit planning for your body type means identifying the silhouettes, proportions, and fabrics t...
TL;DR: Custom outfit planning for your body type means identifying the silhouettes, proportions, and fabrics that naturally complement your shape — then building a small wardrobe around those winners instead of chasing every trend. It's less about "rules" and more about knowing what makes you feel great so getting dressed takes two minutes, not twenty.
Custom outfit planning is the practice of choosing clothing silhouettes, fabrics, and proportions based on your unique body shape rather than defaulting to whatever's on the mannequin. It's not about hiding anything. It's about leaning into what already works for you so every piece in your closet pulls its weight.
Since 2013, we've been hand-selecting pieces for busy women who don't have time to try on fourteen tops before school drop-off. That experience has taught us something simple: when a woman knows her best silhouettes, she shops less, gets dressed faster, and feels more confident walking out the door.
The goal isn't perfection. It's a closet where almost everything fits well, feels comfortable, and plays nicely together.
Forget the outdated fruit comparisons. Focus on three things: where your body is widest, where it's narrowest, and whether your proportions are relatively balanced or more concentrated in one area.
Stand in front of a mirror in fitted clothes and notice:
That's it. You don't need a tape measure or a quiz. Those three observations tell you which silhouettes will feel like they were made for you.
The biggest shift in outfit planning for Spring 2026 is this: the "best" silhouette for your body isn't about camouflage. It's about proportion and balance. Here's how that breaks down.
If your shoulders are wider than your hips: A-line skirts, wide-leg pants, and anything with volume on the bottom half creates visual balance. Up top, softer necklines like V-necks or scoop necks keep things proportional without feeling boxy. Structured shoulder pads? Skip those — you've already got gorgeous structure built in.
If your hips are wider than your shoulders: Boat necks, statement sleeves, and detailed necklines draw the eye upward. Straight-leg or bootcut pants create a clean line from hip to hem. Dark, solid bottoms paired with a brighter or textured top shift the visual weight exactly where you want it.
If your waist is clearly defined: Wrap styles, belted pieces, and anything that nips at the natural waist will feel like it was designed for you. High-waisted pants are your best friend in every season. Boxy or oversized pieces can work too — just add a belt or a front tuck to keep your shape visible.
If your torso runs straight through the middle: Creating the suggestion of a waist does the trick. Peplum tops, tiered dresses, and color-blocking at the waist all work. Fabrics with a little drape — like the linen blends and rayon knits trending this spring — move with you instead of hanging flat.
Absolutely — fabric is half the equation. A perfect silhouette in the wrong fabric falls flat (sometimes literally).
| Body Consideration | Fabrics That Work | Fabrics to Reconsider | |---|---|---| | Carry weight in midsection | Ponte knit, structured cotton, medium-weight jersey | Thin clingy jersey, stiff non-stretch denim | | Fuller bust | Woven cotton with slight stretch, modal blends | Thin silk, unlined chiffon | | Petite frame | Lightweight fabrics that don't overwhelm — linen, chambray | Heavy boucle, oversized chunky knits | | Tall or long-limbed | Nearly anything — heavier fabrics add substance beautifully | Very cropped proportions can exaggerate length |
The FTC's guidance on textile fiber content is worth a quick read if you're curious about what's actually in your clothes. Knowing whether a fabric is 95% polyester vs. 95% cotton changes how it'll drape on your body.
Yes. Full stop. Body type guidance is a starting point, not a dress code.
The real trick is proportion adjustment. Love the oversized blazer trend but you're petite? Size down and push the sleeves to three-quarter length. Obsessed with wide-leg trousers but have a straight torso? Pair them with a fitted, tucked-in top to create waist definition.
Every trend can be adapted. The women who look most pulled-together aren't following rigid rules — they're tweaking proportions so the trend works for them specifically.
Once you know your two or three winning silhouettes, capsule building gets remarkably simple. For Spring 2026, a body-type-specific capsule might look like:
Six pieces. Dozens of combinations. And every single one makes you feel like yourself — not like you're wearing someone else's outfit formula.