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By Worth Collective
Spring Tops That Actually Fit Your Second Trimester Body Second trimester hits and suddenly nothing makes sense. Your regular tops are too tight across ...
Second trimester hits and suddenly nothing makes sense. Your regular tops are too tight across the bust and too short in the torso, but actual maternity clothes swim everywhere else. You're in this awkward middle zone where you look more "big lunch" than obviously pregnant, and your closet is zero help.
This is the sweet spot for strategic shopping—pieces that work now, keep working as you grow, and don't become donation-pile fodder the moment you deliver.
Not all bump-friendly tops are created equal. Some work for exactly three weeks before becoming unwearable. Others stretch with you through delivery and into nursing without looking stretched out.
Smocked bodices are doing the heavy lifting this season. The elastic gathering across the chest and upper torso means the fit adjusts as you change—no gapping, no pulling. Look for styles where the smocking hits at or above the bust line, not below it. Below-bust smocking creates a weird banding effect as your belly grows.
Peplum cuts deserve a second look, especially if you're between sizes. The fitted bodice with a flared hem skims over your midsection without clinging. For Spring 2026, peplums are coming in longer lengths—hitting mid-hip rather than right at the waist—which reads more polished and less 2015.
Wrap-style tops remain undefeated for a reason. The adjustable tie means you control exactly how much room you're working with, week by week. Pro tip: look for wraps with ties that anchor at the side seam rather than loose ties you knot yourself. They lay flatter and don't come undone every time you move.
You're going to be photographed more in the next six months than possibly any other time in your life. Baby showers, announcement posts, casual family gatherings where everyone wants bump pics. Worth thinking about how your tops will read on camera.
Ribbed knits are having a moment, and they're genuinely practical—the vertical lines elongate, the stretch accommodates growth, and they don't wrinkle in your bag. On camera, they read as textured and elevated. In person, they're comfortable all-day pieces.
Linen blends look incredible in natural light photography. They have that effortless, editorial quality that pure cotton doesn't quite achieve. The trade-off: they wrinkle if you look at them wrong. If you're buying linen for an event, plan to steam it immediately before wearing.
Jersey with a bit of structure—think ponte or a heavier modal blend—splits the difference. It moves with you, doesn't cling to every curve, and photographs cleanly without looking like pajamas.
Avoid anything too shiny or with an obvious synthetic sheen. It picks up every overhead light and reads "costume" rather than "outfit."
First trimester, most women can fake it with looser cuts or strategic layering. Third trimester, you're fully in maternity territory and the sizing makes sense. Second trimester is its own fitting challenge.
Your rib cage is expanding—not just your belly. Tops that fit perfectly across the shoulders might pull across your mid-back. This is why raglan sleeves (the kind that angle from the neckline rather than having a set shoulder seam) are so forgiving right now. No shoulder seam means no pulling when your proportions shift.
Your bust is probably larger than your usual size, but not by a consistent amount. Some days more than others. Tops with adjustable elements—ties, buttons you can leave open, stretchy necklines—handle this better than anything with a set structure.
Length matters more than you think. Your torso is getting longer as your belly grows, and tops that hit at your waist in the dressing room will hit above your belly button by month six. Look for pieces that fall at mid-hip minimum. Anything shorter will ride up and require constant adjusting.
You don't need a complete wardrobe overhaul. A few strategic pieces plus some styling adjustments will carry you through.
The half-tuck works beautifully with bump-friendly tops. Tuck just the front center of your top into your waistband (yes, even maternity waistbands) and leave the sides and back loose. It creates definition at your waist without any actual constriction.
Layering pieces change everything. A structured cardigan or open blazer over a simple fitted top suddenly reads as an outfit. The outer layer draws the eye and the simple base doesn't have to work as hard. This also extends pieces that are getting tight—an unbuttoned layer covers what doesn't quite close anymore.
Proportion play matters more now. Fitted on top plus volume on bottom (or vice versa) creates visual balance. Two flowy pieces together often reads as shapeless rather than comfortable. One bodycon element paired with one relaxed element gives you somewhere to land visually.
If you're buying strategically for the next few months, focus on:
Skip anything that only works with one specific bottom or requires shapewear to look right. You're going to want options, and you're not going to want fuss.