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Women's Suits Buying Guide
Ladies, if you're going to work in a professional atmosphere, you might need a suit. Interview etiquette dictates that women look more professional in a skirt suit than a pantsuit. Once you've landed the job you want you'll be able to be a bit more creative in your suit options. You may want to check out the Top Jobs site for a thorough guide to dressing for success at work.
Style Tips- Interview/Conservative-Looking Suits:
- Neutral colors like brown,
beige, black or navy. 
- Have the skirt
hit your knee or slightly below.
- Make sure your clothes are neatly pressed and you're not showing any unseemly panty lines, wrinkles or bulges.
- Keep your jacket
buttoned, at least until the atmosphere is more relaxed.
- Cleavage is not a desired effect in a proper suit.
Select a conservative high-cut blouse and camisole to accompany your suit.
- Buttons shouldn't be flashy (skip the rhinestones). Look for small buttons that match the suit color or for covered by a plackets.
- Accessories like shoes,
handbags, hosiery and jewelry can change the tenor of an outfit from classy to flashy to trashy. Less is usually more in these settings.
- Solid prints, subtle weaves and plaids are appropriate prints.
- Wool,
wool blends, cotton/poly blends, other synthetics and the occasional crisp linen are the right fabrics for making a good first impression in a conservative office.
- Everyday Suits:
- Vogue has the latest fashions for pantsuits. Check out the fancy, expensive options.
- Fabrics, colors, and lengths are at your disposal
- If you are in a creative work environment (i.e. fashion or advertising) you may be able to explore bold colors and more daring silhouettes.
- Even a conversative suit can be daring with the proper accessories. Get creative!
- With any Suit:
- Satin
is for evening-period.
- Same for plunging necklines or wearing a suit without a blouse underneath.
- Find a good tailor to alter your suit to your proportions.
- Try not to dry clean too often--this will leave wool shiny and decrease the life of your suit.
- For more care tips check out Fabriclink.
Fit Guidelines
As with all women's clothing, the numbers on the tag barely matter. Pay more attention to the fit of your suit than to its label. Below are some tips: - The waists of your skirts or pants should lie flat on or slightly below your waist, with you able to comfortably put two fingers between your torso and the waistband. If your stomach is bulging over the waistband, go a size up.
- Look in the three-way mirror and make sure the jacket and skirt fit from all angles.
- Pull your arms out, up and behind you. Are the sleeves coming to your wrists?
- Now sit down and stand up. Does it still look good?
- On jackets, angular women should stick to sharper cuts and pointier lapels. Curvier women should aim towards wider necklines,
softer lapels and two buttons instead of one.
- The jacket should be lined.
- The only part of a jacket that cannot be taken in are the shoulders and lapels. Make sure those elements fit you.
- Anything that is too short cannot be lengthened. A good tailor, on the other hand, can take anything in and up.
| Skirts or Pants |
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Skirt Suits  - The more traditional and conservative of suits. If you can only afford one suit, get a skirt suit in a dark color.

- The skirt should be lined and the waist reinforced.
- If you need a thong
and a slip, wear them.
- Sit down in front of a mirror and make sure everything looks decent and respectable.
- The skirt
should hit mid-knee. Thighs aren't proper workplace decoration.
- If you want a long skirt,
it should be ankle-length, long enough to walk in and not too flow.
- A zipper in the back is much more streamlined than one on the side.
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Pantsuits  - Once you're working somewhere in suits, feel free to expand your wardrobe with pants suits.

- Your pants
should be flattering, slimming, skimming your leg and neither too flow nor too tight.
- If you feel constrained by any part of the fabric, you might want a larger size.
- Check how you look from behind as well.
- While low waists are popular in jeans right now, do not have your hipbone coming out of your suit.
- Pants made from a comfortable fabric do not need to be lined.
- Pleated pants,
while roomier, are currently terribly out of fashion.
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External Links
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