With two utilitarian padded straps emphasizing my large breasts, backpacks and big boobs have always seemed like a bad combination to me. However, lugging my heavy laptop tote on my right shoulder leads to a week of lower back pain on the left, so I finally faced my prejudice and ordered a laptop backpack. Once this ultra-practical backpack from eBags arrived last month, I decided to experiment: does evenly distributed weight across my shoulders necessarily mean a bad look for a big bust?
First, here’s a side-by-side showing what I look like in my shirt alone and then with the backpack. It’s actually not as bad as I expected! I don’t necessarily look larger so much as LOWER because my bust line isn’t grouped with my neckline once I add the straps to the look.
Because I didn’t feel like the big straps automatically made me look ginormous, I wondered if what was at play was the optical illusion in which something large and bulky next to a large chest can actually make it look smaller by comparison. So I dug out this little backpack that my stylist friend Christina convinced me to buy on one of our thrift store adventures.
So much for that theory, right? I prefer the way I look with the smaller, lighter straps below. It’s funny how one decision affects everything else. For instance, I absolutely HAD to have a 15″ screen when we went shopping for laptops last summer, but if I could have been happy with a little tablet, I could get away with the lighter look (but of course I would never have felt the need to purchase a backpack, so this post would never have been written).
Basically, the steps that I took to minimize the effect of the large straps on my large bust are the same I would take without a backpack. You may wonder why I didn’t simply opt for a more lifted bra, but I am wearing my Ewa Michalak in these photos, which is the most centering and lifting bra that I own (other than my new Tutti Rouge that I wrote about last week)–although perhaps I’m due for an adjustment, especially since my smaller breast looks like the larger one in these photos!
1. SHOW MORE SKIN.
In this case, I simply rolled up my sleeves, which reduces the mass effect of so much fabric and helps regroup my bustline with my neckline. A deeper neckline would also help.
2. DRAW THE EYE ELSEWHERE.
Even better, combine steps 1 and 2!
3. ADD A CARDIGAN OR JACKET.
Besides narrowing your visible bustline and torso, if it’s in the same color as your straps, it camouflages them.
Even if the straps are a different color and you’re not drawing the eye away with a necklace, the effect is good.
4. WEAR A SCARF.
With the emphasis on minimizing or distracting from my bust in this post, I must reiterate that BIG BUSTS AREN’T A BAD THING. Recently I encountered two women who vehemently hated their large breasts. The first was a scientist at a conference where I was selling my shirts. With a 29″ waist and a 37″ bust, she fit my size 6M shirt perfectly. “Every morning I wake up hoping they’ll be gone,” she said, “and I look down and they’re still there.” I couldn’t think of anything to say in response! It felt like a giant win that she actually liked the way she looked in my shirt.
I met the second woman on the lingerie floor of a department store where I sometimes help with fittings. Middle age had brought her larger breasts (a 32F at most), and she couldn’t stand the way they protruded through her sweaters. “I just want to cut them off!” she said. Again, I couldn’t think of anything to say, and I couldn’t find a bra to make her happy.
As I prepared for today’s post, I realized that my own attitude toward my large breasts when wearing a backpack could easily veer into the same body-negative territory that these two women inhabit. It’s actually a relief that, as I studied the first before-and-after photos in this post, I realized that I’m perfectly happy with either look. However, I do prefer the photos with more skin, accessories and a cardigan; but my preference isn’t the standard.
Speaking of how-to-dress rules, I think you’ll enjoy Gina Marinelli’s post about embracing a look you love–in this case turtlenecks–regardless of your large bust.
As soon as I saw your post I was on it! I have been revisiting packsacks on my mind for a while – they are so much better for your back and posture (distributing the weight across 2 shoulders and down the back) but I have large breasts too (36FF) and I’m tall so with a packsack I feel as though I’m making a statement, “Look at my breasts will you?!” Not that I mind my breasts but I’m not keen to have them highlighted, apparently jutting out even more than they do and framed. I have found when I’ve sported a packsack in the past people (men and women), stare at my breasts. No I’m not imagining it 🙂 I can see with your pics that some of your fixes do help but I remain unconvinced they would solve my problem.
I so appreciate your comment, Kathleen, because after I published this, I wondered if I was the only one who felt this way! And yes, I wish I could have come up with more backpack-specific solutions rather than bust-minimizing techniques in general.
I hated wearing a backpack in high school (physical comfort more people staring) than so switched to a satchel/tote in undergrad and for my first masters. Now that I’m staring down grad school (and field work) yet again, a little older and a lot more health conscious- I’m looking for a backpack again. Straps have always been contentious; small(ish), sloping shoulders and hyperlaxity-related problems complicate things.
But the strap size/color is a good point. I know the brand is really trendy now but Fjallraven’s Raven 20L might be a good option (or the High Point 18).
Since one of the two programs is in the NYC area- have you seen a trend with what folks are using? DC is so utilitarian, as long as I’m not using a lime green JanSport, I’m set.
As far as comfort goes, I am HATING how hot my backpack feels. I’m hoping it’s just the fact that it’s winter right now, and it’s acting as an extra layer above my coat and other layers beneath that.
Thanks for the heads up about Fjallraven. How did my research miss this?
I’ve been eyeing EVERYONE’s backbacks for a while now, and I can’t say I’ve noticed a trend. It seems to be a matter of dress code and preference. But I HAVE noticed backpacks I prefer, and none of them look like the one I purchased. 🙂
It’s funny that you’re thinking back–and forward–to student days because when I was preparing for this post, I wanted to loop a friend in for her experience with backbacks, but she hadn’t worn one since university. I forgot that another reason to avoid them had been the student look. But that’s one of the reasons I chose the one that I ended up with: it can be converted to a briefcase, so I figured I could wear it on the subway but then tuck in the straps right before going in to meetings.
I didn’t really notice Fjallraven until we got back from Norway, they were everywhere there and then I started see them with school groups and now that the universities are back in session. Most DC commuters use black utility backpacks, sometimes advertising various conventions (my favorite is a guy on my train who uses one from Black Hat.)
But yes, I don’t miss the heat on my back. That was part of the reason I switched in undergrad, no reason to sweat even more in Texas!
You just dont look large chested to me. Not someone who is classify as anyway. Must be thr clothes!