My experience with 1950s styles: You must tighten the waist. The proper look doesn't rely on a big skirt. It relies on a big skirt AND a proportionately small waist. If the waist isn't fitted, it's going to look like a sack on everybody.
Ways to get the big skirt/small waist combination:
So don't give up on the dress! I've made things that were 2 sizes too big, too. Just fit that waist somehow and try your petticoats and see what happens.
Ways to get the big skirt/small waist combination:
- Fit the bodice, especially the waist, to your body. A loose bust isn't a big deal, but a loose waist is a catastrophe.
- Use a belt or a sash. This may work even if the dress isn't fitted right; just experiment to see if it defines the waist enough without causing a lot of weird folds or wrinkles.
- Use a foundation garment. I have naturally about 28/39 waist and hip difference. But for my 1950s stuff to look right, I'm using a waist cincher that gives me about a 26.5" waist. It looks SO much better. It's not just bringing the size down; it's making it firm. Wiggly waist rolls won't work for 1950s!
- Wear a petticoat. Even a small one will work. You must keep the skirt from hanging straight down from the hips. That defeats the whole point of having a full skirt, and it destroys the waist/hip proportion you want.
So don't give up on the dress! I've made things that were 2 sizes too big, too. Just fit that waist somehow and try your petticoats and see what happens.