When I was young, I had a mild obsession with puffed sleeves. This 
was almost certainly fueled by Anne of Green Gables—never mind that that
 book was set in the Victorian era and certainly did not reflect the 
fashion of my times. In my more enlightened adulthood, I have realized 
that puffed sleeves are really only good for one thing: making your 
upper body look gigantic. Puffed sleeves could be considered the perfect
 pairing for broad shoulders, since they are a great equalizer, making 
everyone who wears them look huge, whether they have naturally broad 
shoulders or not. However, if you've spent your whole life trying to 
downplay your shoulders, you don't take kindly to anything that 
deliberately makes them look bigger.
Puffed
 sleeves are one of the last things I would ever voluntarily add to my 
wardrobe, which is why it's ironic that I have a continuous stream of 
this style of top just falling into my lap. From eBay lots to 
hand-me-downs, I get so many puffed sleeves, I could practically start a
 whole museum dedicated to them! Or I could just use them as fodder for 
an endless array of creative refashions. Most of the time, I just lop 
off the sleeves and turn them into sleeveless blouses. I once had great 
success cutting off just part of the sleeve and making a nice fluttery 
cap sleeve. But with the latest delivery of puffed-sleeve blouses, I 
decided to try something different. 
Since I'm going pretty heavy on the commentary today, I'll save the 
construction details for another post, but let it suffice to say 
that the end product looks like a cross between your standard 
cold-shoulder top (you know, one of those shirts with a cutout in the 
shoulder area—this is my first foray into that arena) and the 
off-the-shoulder tops that have been blowing up the fashion world all 
summer (this is my first foray into off-the-shoulder details as well!).
ICYMI
 (So one abbreviates when one wants to seem especially "with it"), 
off-the-shoulder tops were unquestionably the single trendiest thing to 
wear this summer, hands down. As with puffed sleeves, I had 
a longstanding off-the-shoulder obsession when I was young (no doubt 
fueled by every Disney Princess ever).
 I have since come to the realization that unless you are shaped like a 
Disney Princess, off-the-shoulder-tops (just like puffed sleeves as 
well!) will merely make your upper body look comically gigantic—an 
unsurprising result of having an unbroken horizontal line running all 
the way across the front. But with its vertical arm openings, this shirt
 breaks up that line, accomplishing the off-the-shoulder aesthetic 
without the body-widening effect.
I'm
 pretty pleased that I was able to try this trend the same year as I 
first saw it, although admittedly I had to risk death by freezing to 
wear it on a rainy day in late September. That was actually an 
experiment in itself, as normally I only wear sleeveless shirts when 
it's 75° or warmer. I don't know if this happens to other people, but 
with me, if my upper arms are cold, all of me feels cold—even if other 
parts of me are so hot they're sweating. So I was thinking, with a 
cold-shoulder top, I might be able to keep my upper arms warm enough to 
feel comfortable, while still being able to bare my shoulders, in a look
 that I vastly prefer. It seemed to work. Despite the office running a 
steady 74 degrees all day, I never got too chilly.
The fabric of this top is a dark, very
 slightly purplish grey—the purplish hue making it very difficult to 
pair with anything except pure white and pure black. So I wore it with a
 black skirt and some black mary janes. I probably did, unintentionally, have a little bit of a French maid vibe going on.

 
 
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