YOU'D think trying on a cute dress would be the easy, fun part of a shopping trip. The reward after endless hours of training and meal prepping. But for female bodybuilders, stepping into a high-street changing room can feel like entering an escape room – only with worse lighting and no guarantee you’ll get back out again.
Take it from me. Not long ago, I was in TK Maxx, browsing the racks like any normal woman looking for a little retail therapy. I found this gorgeous dress, floaty, pretty, in my size (or so I thought) and just the thing for keeping cool when the sun's turned up to the max. I squeezed into the changing room, pulled it over my head – and got stuck.
And I don’t mean slightly snug. I mean full panic. Arms jammed above my head like I was trying to signal for rescue, the fabric glued around my shoulders and lats like shrink-wrap. Within seconds I was sweating, make-up smudging, hair stuck to my forehead. There was this fleeting, horrifying moment where I genuinely pictured myself waddling out on to the shop floor in my underwear, half-dressed, begging a stranger to help peel me out of the prison I’d willingly stepped into.
Funny now, but humiliating at the time. That moment perfectly sums up the hidden headache of being a muscular woman in a world of cookie-cutter sizing.
When we talk about the challenges for female bodybuilders, people usually think about heavy weights, strict diets, or stepping on stage in tiny sparkly bikinis. But no one talks about the everyday battles, like trying to find a pair of jeans that will fit over your quads and hug your waist without gaping open like a tent.
Standard women’s clothing is designed for an ‘average’ female shape; narrower shoulders, slim arms, soft curves. That really doesn’t leave much room for broad lats, thick glutes, or triceps that look like you could smuggle dumbbells under your sleeves.
Here’s the reality:
If it fits your legs, the waistband is a baggy mess.
If it fits your waist, good luck getting it past your thighs.
Shirts and jackets that fit your torso can trap your shoulders like a straitjacket.
Shirts gape at the chest, sleeves squeeze your arms like sausages and fitted dresses? Let’s just say, RIP to seams everywhere.
Add in that we actually want to show off our muscles (we work hard for these physiques) and suddenly the dressing room becomes a battlefield of fabric, zips and broken dreams.
Some people might say, “Just wear gym clothes then.” And sure, we do. Stretchy leggings, hoodies and racerbacks are our daily uniform. But we’re not machines, we’re women, too. We want to feel feminine, to dress up for a wedding, put on a power suit for work, or rock a cute sundress on a date.
That’s where the real frustration kicks in, because the message from the mirror sometimes feels like: “Your body is too much for ‘normal’ clothes'.
It’s a reminder that the same muscles we’re so proud of make us ‘different’, that mainstream fashion still hasn’t caught up with strong female physiques. And while we wouldn’t trade our muscle for anything, the fitting room struggle can test your confidence faster than any competition prep.
So, what’s the solution?
Do we just accept the struggle? Not exactly. Many of us become part-time tailors, amateur stylists and bargain-hunters in the men’s section. Some brands have caught on, a handful now offer ‘athletic fit’ jeans and jackets with extra room for biceps and quads. But options are still limited.
Until the fashion world wakes up to the fact that women can be both muscular and stylish, we do what we always do, adapt, improvise and share our hacks with each other.
So, for my fellow muscle queens stuck in changing room limbo, here are my Top Five Tips to survive:
1: Size Up, Tailor Down:
Don’t be afraid to buy a size (or two) up if it fits your biggest areas; shoulders, arms, quads. Then pay for alterations to cinch the waist or taper sleeves. A good tailor is a muscular woman’s best friend.
2: Embrace Stretch Fabrics:
Look for clothes with a bit of lycra. A small stretch percentage can make a huge difference when pulling jeans over quads, or bending your arms into a blazer.
3: Men’s Section Magic:
Don’t be shy! The men’s department often has better options for broad shoulders or longer torsos. Men’s blazers, shirts and coats can be surprisingly flattering when styled right.
4: Belt It and Own It:
If you end up with a dress that’s roomy at the waist, add a belt. It’ll accentuate your shape instead of hiding it and stop you looking like you borrowed someone else’s clothes.
5: Know Your Brands:
Hunt for brands known for ‘athletic cut’ or ‘curvy fit.’ Some jeans and sportswear labels design specifically for bigger thighs and glutes. Read reviews and join bodybuilding forums, word of mouth is gold.
At the end of the day, I’d rather break a dress than break my confidence. I worked for these shoulders. I built these quads. If they don’t fit the standard high-street sizing? That’s the high street’s problem, not mine.
So next time you see me laughing at myself in a changing room mirror, arms pinned up, stuck halfway into a dress know this: it’s not a weakness. It’s proof that I chose strength over squeezing into someone else’s idea of ‘normal.’ And I’d choose that again every single time.
*Read more from Louise Plumb here.