STRAIGHT-LEGGED PANTS AND A THIGH LENGTH SWEATER PERFECT FOR WINTER WEATHER!

STRAIGHT-LEGGED PANTS AND A THIGH LENGTH SWEATER PERFECT FOR WINTER WEATHER!

In everyone’s life, cold weather will fall. And, if you are built like me and prefer excessive sunshine to dismal chills, there is one benefit of fighting off frigid weather. Bundle up clothes are comfortable and aesthetically enjoyable to wear!

A terrific ensemble for easing the pain of cold weather is wearing straight legged pants and long, thigh-length sweaters. Adding jackets, sweatshirts, shawls, etc. and layering your clothes not only adds warmth, but style as well. Battle the cold looking chic and swell!

Straight-legged pants and a thigh length sweater perfect for winter weather!

ImageImageImageImageImage

Straight legged pants seem to go better with longer, layered shirts and sweaters than bell bottomed or flared pants. With the loose fabric on top, and pants that fit snug and taper at the ankles, the look tends to create a long, thin appearance. Symmetrically, the look is eye catching and stylish. Add boots or a pump shoe, and you radiate a vogue, cozy, warm look.

Straight legged pants (or slim-fit pants) have a snug fit through the legs and end in a small opening that can be anywhere from 9 inches to 20 inches, depending on the size. Denim straight legged pants are often times referred to as skinny jeans or pencil pants. A sweater is a knit garment intended to cover the torso and arms. Sweaters are often worn over shirts, blouses, T-shirts, tank tops, or merely against skin.

Cover the skin that you are in by adorning yourself in straight legged pants and an oversized sweater. What could be better?

ImageImageImage
ImageImage

To give yourself a more tapered, fashionable flair, wearing a belt around your waist to accentuate your figure, and wrapping a shawl over your shoulders, or a scarf around your neck, adds to the coolness of your cold weather outfit. Various types of sweaters that wear well with straight legged pants are pullover sweaters, button up sweaters, zip front sweaters, cardigans, turtleneck sweaters and V-neck sweaters.

Sweater Fun Fact: It was in the late 20th century that the sweater increasingly came to be worn as an alternative to a shirt, when finer materials made the sweater comfortable against the skin. My most favorite sweater to wear as a shirt? A cashmere sweater. Cashmere sweaters are soft, furry, feminine and rich looking. Pretty and pleasing.

ImageImageImageImageImageImage

Wear it better! Straight legged pants and a thigh-length sweater.

In fashion, the straight legged pants and long, layered tops are a universal favorite for inclement weather or overcast days apparel.  There are so many ways to wear this look, and the results are always spectacular.

ImageImageImageImageImageImage

Hats on the head and boots on the feet add an extra batch of oomph when you strut down the street.

Not a fan of the cold? Winter clothes help to take the sting out of the biting freeze.

ImageImage

Sweater Fun Fact: In South African English, a sweater is called a jersey. In the sport of Ice Hockey, the top of the hockey player’s uniform had traditionally been a sweater, and even though modern hockey uniform tops are more commonly a jersey, they are typically referred to as a “hockey sweater”, regardless of the style. Frequently, in the United States, it is called a hockey “jersey.”

Whether you are attending an ice hockey game, a roller hockey game, or some other sporting event, take center stage when you dress spot on glam, unable to look much better, when you show up dressed in straight legged pants and a thigh-length sweater.

The weather may be cold, but you will be amazingly comfortable when draped in diva winter wonderland duds!

Nancy Mangano is an American beauty/fashion/style influencer, fashion journalist, screenwriter and author of the Natalie North murder mystery book series. Visit Nancy on her global online fashion/style/beauty magazine Nancy Marie Mangano Style at https://nancymariemangano.com, her Facebook page Nancy Mangano at  https://www.facebook.com/nancymmangano/  Twitter @https://twitter.com/nancymangano and her author website http://nancymangano.com

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *