Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I pine for crisp, professional buttondowns, but have only recently discovered wardrobe tape for that gap between the buttons! I used to not be able to wear any buttondown shirts; even if the rest of the shirt flapped on me, there was always the boob gap. Now I can wear them just a little oversized![]()
Look for shirts with extra buttons. I’m not sure what brands do this, but I have a chambray top that I got from Old Navy that has two internal extra buttons where there might be a gap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My breast reduction was the best thing I’ve done for myself.
OP here: I was just thinking about calling my insurance to look into this! Especially after weight loss... Since I've heard sometimes they expect some before approving it. That's on my checklist to investigate!
NP here. My insurance covered it. I was a 36H. Life changing!
For now, though. V necks are right (not too low). I usually wore dark colors and simple. I wore a lot of sweaters and blazers to cover/distract (that is where you can use color).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My breast reduction was the best thing I’ve done for myself.
OP here: I was just thinking about calling my insurance to look into this! Especially after weight loss... Since I've heard sometimes they expect some before approving it. That's on my checklist to investigate!
Anonymous wrote:Men are going to stare at G cups. It’s as certain as the sun rising in the east. As long as they’re not talking to your chest in the office just act cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My breast reduction was the best thing I’ve done for myself.
OP here: I was just thinking about calling my insurance to look into this! Especially after weight loss... Since I've heard sometimes they expect some before approving it. That's on my checklist to investigate!
Anonymous wrote:Men are going to stare at G cups. It’s as certain as the sun rising in the east. As long as they’re not talking to your chest in the office just act cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: thank you all for your comments and suggestions! This bra fitting is one of many changes, all with a ripple effect: less and healthier eating, weight loss, teeth improvements, hair growing out, (hopefully) job stability... The next thing on my list is to meet with a stylist and I have a virtual call next week. The new bras are what pushed me over the edge to realize I need not only different sizes, but most likely different styles and brands of clothing.
I like the suggestion of trying knits. Thankful for the other poster with narrow shoulders. Confirmed my thoughts - will likely give away whatever blouses I have left that I keep thinking I'll wear some day/when I lose more weight. I already avoid embellishments, busy patterns and logos/words.
I'm 5'9". I'm almost into Tall fits but when I've tried, especially with jeans, I end up needing hemming or they're strangely too big elsewhere even if the regular size isn't too big. I do find that a lot of shirts/knits are too short on me- of course the bust is a factor but maybe I have a longish torso too.
I am curious about necklines - I am thinking of stepping away from crew neck and boat neck. Seems like V-neck (not too low of course) may flatter me most.
OP I’m the one who asked about your height. At 5’9” your chest is large but not overwhelming for your frame. I’m 5’2” and 34E and I believe I’m able to successfully camouflage and not have my chest overwhelm a small frame, so I think you can too. I’m in between misses and petite so I relate to the annoyance of being in between.
I choose clothes and jewelry with a strong vertical element to de-emphasize my chest. No crew necks, typically no boat necks. So this could be a dress with piping or vertical stripes, a v-neck sweater, etc. Lots of knits. I would rather show cleavage than look like balloons are strapped to my chest. I wear a belt or have something somewhere to draw the eye away from the chest like even fancy earrings. I kind of avoid blouses in general unless they are fitted in a particular way so that I don’t look like I’m popping out of them without tailoring. They exist! You’ll find if you continue to get healthier your body shape will change too.
Anonymous wrote:I pine for crisp, professional buttondowns, but have only recently discovered wardrobe tape for that gap between the buttons! I used to not be able to wear any buttondown shirts; even if the rest of the shirt flapped on me, there was always the boob gap. Now I can wear them just a little oversized![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP: thank you all for your comments and suggestions! This bra fitting is one of many changes, all with a ripple effect: less and healthier eating, weight loss, teeth improvements, hair growing out, (hopefully) job stability... The next thing on my list is to meet with a stylist and I have a virtual call next week. The new bras are what pushed me over the edge to realize I need not only different sizes, but most likely different styles and brands of clothing.
I like the suggestion of trying knits. Thankful for the other poster with narrow shoulders. Confirmed my thoughts - will likely give away whatever blouses I have left that I keep thinking I'll wear some day/when I lose more weight. I already avoid embellishments, busy patterns and logos/words.
I'm 5'9". I'm almost into Tall fits but when I've tried, especially with jeans, I end up needing hemming or they're strangely too big elsewhere even if the regular size isn't too big. I do find that a lot of shirts/knits are too short on me- of course the bust is a factor but maybe I have a longish torso too.
I am curious about necklines - I am thinking of stepping away from crew neck and boat neck. Seems like V-neck (not too low of course) may flatter me most.
Anonymous wrote:My breast reduction was the best thing I’ve done for myself.