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Check out some of our
competition and you'll see
similarly titled articles.
They'll give terribly practical
advice about how to create a
maternity wardrobe that will
last you a long time and "not
break the bank".
According to them, you are
supposed to buy maternity
clothes just like you do a
non-maternity wardrobe. You buy
mostly staples. A non-descript
pair of maternity pants, a plain
button-down maternity shirt, all
in solid colors like black and
white. When you have most of
your boring maternity pieces out
of the way, if you have any
money left, you should spice it
up with just a few maternity
pieces that will make it
interesting and "make you feel
special".
Browse around our store and
you'll see in every pixel of the
site how I feel about that
advice. I say "Bologna!"
First, the maternity clothes...
First of all, this "wardrobe"
only needs to last you about 6
months of pregnancy. And if
you're lucky you'll be out of
them before a month post
partum. (But that's what we
recommend
transitional clothes
for. More about that later)
This 6 month maternity period is
going to see you changing a
lot! You are going to become
unbelievably tired of your
gargantuan body. And you will
become extremely bored with your
drab "staples" by the end of the
3rd month. Especially if this
is your second time or more
through your maternity wardrobe!
Never in my life have I hated
clothing more than in my first
pregnancy, when I bought the
trendiest maternity clothing
available at the local chain
store (which was not at all
trendy, of course. You know the
name of that store. You've been
in it. And that's why you find
yourself at Eva Lillian!).
The maternity pants had panels
with thin elastic at the top,
which didn't hold them up when I
was small and dug into my belly
when I was big. The shirts
all had
the old-school tie in the back
and were so big that the terms
"body-hugging" and "pregnant and
proud of it" had obviously never
been uttered in their
headquarters. Ordinary was the
best word to describe these
maternity clothes (and I would
still use that word for their
low-quality maternity
clothing).
Not only could I find nothing I
liked, or that was even slightly
comfortable, but nothing fit
me. I'm 5'8" and was borderline
"tall" before I had a big bump
hiking up all my over-the-belly
pants. And I gained over 45 lbs!
My second pregnancy was much
better. I refused to wear
almost anything from my first
pregnancy, and I refused to shop
at that same mall store for
maternity clothing. I turned to
the internet and found such
wonderful things. Under the
belly maternity pants (and
underbelly underwear and
thongs! That was a eureka
moment), pretty and feminine
tops, luxuriously slinky
fabrics, and a fabulous fit.
I actually lost 15 lbs in the
first half of my second
pregnancy due to my extreme
morning sickness. (I remember
there was one day, the day
I started my acupuncture
treatment for it, where I
ate most of a tomato and drank a
half glass of orange juice, and
managed to keep it down. That
was a great day.) So I was
starting from a much smaller
size this time, and I wanted to
really show off my bump. I
bought those figure flattering
maternity clothes that hug your
body and make you feel
relatively normal.
And I got more compliments on my
clothes and how great I looked
than I have in my entire life,
before or since. Let me tell
you what a pick-me-up that is
when you are the most tired
you've ever been in your life,
dragging your sorry self into
work, feeling incredibly green
and like you just want to dig
out your uterus with a spoon to
prevent yourself from ever
feeling like this again.
Now that's feeling special.
I bought only trendy maternity
clothes. I bought sexy maternity
clothes that would have me
feeling great about my expanding
body. When else in your life are
you buying a whole new wardrobe
to wear for only 6 months? Go
crazy and get the things that
won't last years, because
you don't need it to. I loved
my maternity clothing in the
second pregnancy, because it
made me feel sexy, pretty, and
happy. It made me feel better
when not much else would.
That is the benefit of trendy
designer maternity clothing.
And now for those transitional
clothes of which I spoke...
The first time around, I just
bought plus sized clothing for a
few months after the baby was
born. What I could find wasn't
attractive and it just didn't
fit right. My chest was much
larger, as was my belly, but
other things just didn't warrant
plus sizes. So I looked frumpy
and un-put-together.
The second time, I bought
transitional clothing for my
postpartum period. I bought a
nursing dress (because this is
one piece of nursing wear you
can't substitute. You may be
able to make do for shirts, but
you can't hike your whole dress
over your head every few hours
when that baby squalls), and
Lily Padz's unbelievable
nursing pads.
Despite being pretty much the
same size as I was my first
postpartum period, I got
compliments, I felt good and
attractive, and my clothes fit
my new body. Transitional
clothing is worth its weight in
gold. Some feel it's an
unnecessary expense when your
husband's clothes will do. But
you need every tool you've got
to feel normal, and pretty, and
not-just-Mommy again.
Transitional Clothes were that
missing link back to being a
woman again, and they, and
you, are worth every
penny.
That is the benefit of having a
"Personal Shopper" (me) that's
been there and done that, and is
able to let you in on all the
little secret tools that make
Motherhood easier. |