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Beyond Big Shirts
A Professional Pregnancy
By Kelly Burgess
When Janelle Cooke, of Carbondale, Ill., had her first child 10 years ago, dressing for work was no problem. As a floor nurse on an orthopedic ward, she just bought bigger smocks and enough maternity scrubs to last a few days before she had to do laundry. A year ago, when she found she was pregnant with her second child, her job had changed quite a bit and her wardrobe had to, too.
In the decade between the birth of her two children, Cooke had earned her master's degree in business administration and was working as an assistant administrator for a large healthcare system. "It's important to make a professional impression at all times in this job, not only for the doctors that we work with on a day to day basis, but for the public relations side as well," she says. "Smocks and leggings were definitely not going to cut it this time."
Jennifer Strom Simonte, owner and CEO of Belly Dance Maternity, says today's trend is clothes a women would wear if she weren't pregnant. According to Simonte, today's fashion approach is to accent the pregnancy and flatter the rest of the figure. "Women want to wear the same types of things they wore before they got pregnant," she says. "The goal of every designer I carry is to allow women to continue to indulge their sense of style while they're expecting."
Denise Kalinowski, junior designer at babystyle, an online store devoted to maternity and baby fashions, agrees that fitted clothes are important in pregnancy so the woman doesn't look big all over. "This has been a consistent trend for the past few years, because clothes look better more fitted so they show off that a woman is pregnant," says Kalinowski. "Too much extra fabric actually makes the pregnant silhouette look large and bulky."
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