I’ve been eyeing these pants for weeks and finally got to try them on. The size medium tugged at the belly and were a bit snug in the rear. The large were too big all over. How often does this happen that you try a lot of styles and your best option still isn’t a great fit in the belly? That’s where some strategic styling can help. I tried them with my 5B shirt styles and here’s how it worked. I wore this olive striped tee to the store. Olive stripes wouldn’t be my first choice with these light blue pants but I got to see how a simple T-shirt worked with these pants. Tucked in, the belly is on full display. A BANDED HEM top is a great option with elastic waistband pants when you don’t want to tuck in your shirt. I’d love this more with a longer sweater. This is an XS and a bigger size may be better. A hip length blouse BREAKS UP the body at the hip bone to define the waist. The BUTTONS draw the eye up and down. I tried the jacket to see the midsection BENEATH A LAYER. The structure of the vertical lines and collar are good with the flowy pants and the midsection is smoothed. I didn’t try a BLOUSED top other than the striped tee tucked in. Something more relaxed with more weight to the fabric may be better. If you’re struggling to find pants that work through the belly, see what happens when you try a BANDED top, a BUTTON-FRONT top, a BROKEN UP top, or a look BENEATH A LAYER. Would you have bought these pants? Why or why not? 📏For reference, I’m midsized, 5’6”, slightly short-waisted, 36-B bust, and wear a small or medium top with size 10/12 jeans. LTKOver40 LTKSaleAlert LTKMidsize