How To Wear The Skirts-Over-Pants Trend That's Everywhere Right Now

If you love layers and hate deciding between pants or skirts, you'll love this trend.
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Wearing pants under dresses has been popular in the U.S. since the 1800s.

Wearing skirts and dresses over pants is officially making a comeback, and the look is perfectly suited for all the indecisive folks out there. 

One thing we love about this trend is that it’s a perfect mix between traditionally masculine and feminine styles. It’s like the fashion equivalent of having your cake and eating it, too: You don’t have to decide between a dress and pants because you can just wear both. As gender lines in fashion are becoming increasingly blurred, it seems like a good time to give this trend a go. 

Of course, wearing a skirt or dress over pants isn’t a new thing. In traditional Indian dressing, men and women wear a kurta or kurti (a long, tunic-like top) over matching trousers and even jeans, for example. In Vietnam, they have the áo dài, a long gown also worn with trousers. 

In the U.S. in the 1800s, the style made its way into everyday life by way of bloomers, loose pants worn under tunics and dresses that allowed women more freedom of mobility than the restrictive dresses and petticoats of the time. Into the 20th century, some women were wearing hostess pajamas or hostess gowns, which often consisted of some type of robe-like top layered over a pair of trousers. The ensemble was meant to be worn inside the house. Stars like Lucille Ball and Ginger Rogers were fans. 

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Left: Ginger Rogers wears hostess pajamas in the 1950s. Right: A model wears silk evening pajamas, circa 1965.

Wearing pants under skirts and dresses was also quite popular in the ’90s and early ’00s, and has crept up on red carpets and runways over the years (Emma Watson’s 2014 Golden Globes ensemble is a good example).

For whatever reason, it seems to be sticking this time around. We saw the layered look on both spring and fall 2019 runways, including at Jil Sander, Schiaparelli and Alexander McQueen. The look also seems to be a go-to for street style stars and celebrities ― Jennifer Connelly and Julia Roberts are two recent examples ― looking to step outside the box. 

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Marc Piasecki via Getty Images
Jennifer Connelly wears a skirt over pants outside the Louis Vuitton show in Paris, 2019.

The key to rocking this trend in real life, according to Toronto-based stylist Nadia Pizzimenti, is to play around with contrast. She suggested pairing a feminine frock with straight-leg jeans, for example, or layering different hemlines, like a long boyfriend blazer paired with a midi skirt over jeans. 

“It’s also important to let the dress be the star of the show,” she added, noting that “accessories should be minimal in style and shape.”  

If you’re looking to ease into the trend, Amber Watkins, a stylist also based in Toronto, said shirt dresses work particularly well, as “you can opt to undo the bottom few buttons to show a little more pant.” She also suggested starting with pants that are fitted, especially if you’re new to the trend. Pizzimenti agreed, saying fitted pants will keep an outfit from looking too bulky. 

Of course, those tips are just a starting point. There are so many ways to rock this trend. Scroll through the images below for a little inspiration.

On the runway: 

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Models wear dresses over pants on the fall 2019 runways for Balmain (left) and Jil Sander (right).
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Left to right: Beautiful People, Busnel, Alexander McQueen
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Left to right: Sunnei, Paul & Joe, Schiaparelli

On the street: 

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Matthew Sperzel via Getty Images
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Christian Vierig via Getty Images
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Christian Vierig via Getty Images

How to get it: 

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Before You Go

Vintage Style: Women In Suits
Marlene Dietrich(01 of18)
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Dietrich strolls along Hollywood Street in a gray man's suit with turtleneck sweater in this undated photo, circa 1933. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Katharine Hepburn(02 of18)
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An undated portrait of actress Katharine Hepburn wearing a suit, with a cigarette in her hand. (credit:Alfred Eisenstaedt via Getty Images)
Bette Davis(03 of18)
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Bette Davis and her third husband, William Grant Sherry, pushing the airplane "Now Voyager," circa 1947. (credit:Loomis Dean via Getty Images)
Greta Garbo(04 of18)
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Greta Garbo wears a suit in this undated photo. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Jean Harlow(05 of18)
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Actress Jean Harlow in a scene from the 1936 movie "Libeled Lady." (credit:Donaldson Collection via Getty Images)
Myrna Loy(06 of18)
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Loy wears a man's suit and hat for a publicity photograph before the release of "The Thin Man," in April 1934. (credit:John Kobal Foundation via Getty Images)
Marlene Dietrich(07 of18)
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Dietrich dresses as the tuxedo clad Amy Jolly in the 1930 film "Morocco." (credit:Eugene Robert Richee via Getty Images)
Ruby Keeler(08 of18)
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The actress and dancer wears a suit in this undated photo. (credit:John Springer Collection via Getty Images)
Norma Shearer(09 of18)
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Shearer photographed in a suit on the beach by her home in an undated photo. (credit:John Springer Collection via Getty Images)
Ginger Rogers(10 of18)
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Rogers models a suit in this 1933 photo. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Meg Mundy(11 of18)
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Mundy wears a red wool slack suit emblazoned with eagle figure, with white shirt and white turban, surrounded by mythological constellation illustrations in Vogue, 1940. (credit:John Rawlings via Getty Images)
Katharine Hepburn(12 of18)
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Hepburn wears a suit for a press conference in 1952. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Lucille Ball(13 of18)
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Ball (seen here with Desi Arnaz) wears a suit in this undated photo taken during for an anniversary party in the 1950s. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Jean Harlow(14 of18)
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Harlow seen wearing a suit sometime in the 1930s. (credit:Keystone-France via Getty Images)
Katharine Hepburn(15 of18)
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Hepburn wears a suit on the ice rink at Madison Square Garden in this photo from 1936. (credit:Bettmann via Getty Images)
Judy Garland(16 of18)
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Garland wears a heavily embellished suit in this photo from 1968. (credit:C. Maher via Getty Images)
Hedy Lamarr(17 of18)
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Lamarr poses in a suit for Vogue, 1938. (credit:Toni Frissell via Getty Images)
Benita Hume(18 of18)
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Hume (with second husband Ronald Coleman) wears a pantsuit with a short sleeved jacket, standing in the garden of their Brentwood, California home in 1940. (credit:Alexander Paal via Getty Images)

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