ʻO kahi lole kāhiko no kēlā me kēia ʻano kino

One of the most versatile dresses that were ever designed for wear on special occasions is the lole ʻaʻeke. While the events for which lole ʻaʻekees are worn are usually late afternoon or early evening affairs that are too casual to be called black-tie events, many lole ʻaʻekees can now be worn elsewhere, depending on the cut and the material of the dress and the accessories worn with it.

To wear a lole ʻaʻeke to a more formal event, all you need to do is to accessorize accordingly, perhaps wear more flashy pieces of jewelry and heavier makeup. If you need to wear something dressy to the office for any reason other than the usual skirt or pantsuit, you can wear a lole ʻaʻeke that is not too flashy and just throw on a blazer and slip into sensible office shoes. Many current styles of lole ʻaʻekees are no longer limited to being party wear anymore.

Choosing what style of lole ʻaʻeke to wear, however, can be very tricky for most women. After all, only a few women could claim to have truly perfect bodies, and most women who do not fall into the supermodel category prefer to hide the flaws of their figures. Wearing a one-piece dress such as a lole ʻaʻeke can easily reveal those flaws if the dress does not fit the wearer’s body type.

In picking out the right lole ʻaʻeke to wear, a woman should always consider her body type - if she is top-heavy or bottom-heavy - and find something that will balance out her figure. If it is bottom-heavy, it should be to draw attention to the upper part of her body and to her face. If she is top-heavy, she has the option to emphasize her cleavage or to wear something that will pull the eyes to her legs.

What kind of lole ʻaʻeke would a woman have with a bottom-heavy figure? As said above, a woman with a bottom-heavy figure would want to hide the thickness around her hips and thighs. A good lole ʻaʻeke for her to wear would be a dress that fits tightly around the waist but with the seams pushed out by the padding around the abdomen and having a skirt that flies out of the hips and thighs. A lole ʻaʻeke with a full skirt would be perfect for a woman with a bottom-heavy figure because it will definitely hide whatever flabbiness and bulges that she would like to see.

Another option available for a woman with a bottom-heavy figure is a lole ʻaʻeke that sports an empire-style waistline. A lole ʻaʻeke with an empire-style waistline has the higher waist, thus pulling the eyes towards the shoulders, the neck and the face. It also drapes and skims over the lower body. The only risk with wearing an empire-style lole ʻaʻeke, however, is that the empire-style cut is often used on maternity dresses, and so a woman wearing such a dress may be mistaken to be pregnant.

A ʻo kahi ʻē aʻe i koho ai no ka wahine me kahi kiʻi ʻōhiku i lalo, he kapa kakohu ʻo ia a he kapa ʻole a he strapless paha, pū nō hoʻi me ke kaʻe flaring. Eia hou, ke kāohi ʻana i nā pūhaka a me nā poʻohiwi kūpono e huki ana i ka nānā ʻana i kahi o nā hope.

ʻO nā wahine me nā helu koʻikoʻi, hiki iā ia ke koʻikoʻi i ke kālai ʻia ʻana a i ʻole kāna hoʻoilina, e like me ka mea i ʻōlelo ʻia ma luna. Inā makemake ʻo ia e pili pono i nā wāwae ma mua o kona kahakaha ʻana, hiki iā ia ke komo i ke kapa paniʻulaʻula me ka puʻu kīwaha pale o ka paena i ka launa ʻia. Hiki iā ia ke lele i ka ʻōpū o kona kaʻe e hoʻomaʻalā pōkole a huki maoli i nā maka i kona mau wāwae.

Inā makemake ʻo ia e hoʻowai i ka nānā ʻana i kona ʻoka ma mua o kona mau wāwae, hiki iā ia ke uhi i kona mau wāwae i kahi kaahu lōʻihi lōʻihi lūlū akā ke hōʻike i kahi ʻili iki ma luna o kona kino o luna me ka ʻāʻī V-neck gula e wili ana i ka ʻāʻī. I ka mea ʻoiaʻiʻo, hiki iā ia ke huki i nā maka i nā ʻaʻa ʻelua o ia i ke kāʻei ʻana i ka lei lei inā makemake ʻo ia. ʻO ka mea e pono ai e ʻaʻahu i ka lole sime me ka toply pīhoihoi nui no ka mea e ʻoi aku ia i ke kino o luna e nānā nui aku a nānā i ke ʻano o kāna kiʻi.

Hiki pū nā mea hoʻolako e mālama i ke kinona o ke kaulike ma ka silhouette o ka wahine ʻaʻole i ke kāʻei ʻana i ka lole cocktail kūpono. Hiki i nā wahine Heavier ke aahu i nā apo pepeiao, a ʻāʻī a me nā lei, a ʻo nā wahine koʻikoʻi paha e haki i nā lei a koho i ke kūpaʻa. Eia nō naʻe, ʻo ia e kūʻai mua i kāna kapa kīkaha ma mua o ke hoʻoholo ʻana i nā hāmeʻa, nā ʻeke a me nā kāmaʻa paha e paʻa.





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