Hey ya'll! I'm a 16/f and I have a question about bathingsuits...I'm pretty tan- but from tennis so i have sock lines and shorts lines. I'm fine with my stomach when it comes to bathing suits but not so much with my thighs. I'm 127 and athletic but my thighs aren't as small as I would want them to be(5/6 AE jeans..) and the short lines don't help. So my question is should i still get a regular bikini? I've tried shorts but most are to big around the waist and don't fit awesome- even after my mom makes the waist smaller. So should i get a regular bikini bottom? If not, should i just work on getting shorts or is there another option? Thanks! <<3
LoveNJstyle answered Sunday June 12 2005, 12:00 pm: i say just get a regular one then you can tan the part that isnt tan from the shorts. thighs...ugh. i think if you hav a good stomach it will most likely make up for it. if your athletic i doubt theyre ike fat and muscular is good. <3 [ LoveNJstyle's advice column | Ask LoveNJstyle A Question ]
DangerNerd answered Sunday June 12 2005, 4:42 am: Hello there,
If you are playing tennis quite frequently you will be building up your quadriceps. Those are the large muscles on your thighs.
Well muscled legs are nothing to be ashamed of and you might be surprised how many guys really go for that sort of thing.
Go for the bikini and don't worry about it. The only thing, which you have already discovered, is that when you have well-developed legs most shorts look funny.
Look for styles of shorts that are specifically designed for female cyclists and tennis players. These are people who will be built just like you.
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.