
I spent roughly a decade of summers genuinely believing I was just a person who didn’t look good in shorts. I’d buy a pair every June out of sheer heat-related desperation, wear them exactly once, feel the waistband roll or the inner thighs rub within the first hour, and quietly retire them to the back of a drawer until the following summer, when I’d repeat the entire cycle. It took embarrassingly long to realize the problem was never my body. It was that I kept buying the same three-inch inseam, elastic-waist cut that was never going to work for how I actually move through a day.
Once I started thinking about shorts the way I think about every other piece of clothing what’s the actual situation I’m dressing for everything changed. A pair built for a full day of walking is a completely different garment than one built for sitting at an outdoor dinner. Here’s what I’ve landed on for five specific situations, and why each one actually solves the problem instead of just tolerating it.
It’s Not You, It’s the Shorts
Chafing, riding up, a waistband that digs in by hour two these are fit problems, not body problems, and they’re almost always caused by the same handful of design choices: too short an inseam, too little structure in the fabric, or a waistband with no give at all. The fix is rarely “wear shorts anyway and push through it.” It’s choosing a silhouette that was actually built for how you’re spending the day.
What to Look For Instead
A longer inseam anything hitting mid-thigh or below reduces chafing dramatically just by reducing skin-on-skin contact. Skorts give you the coverage and no-ride-up security of a skirt with the actual movement of shorts underneath. Culottes and wide-leg shorts add breathing room and drape without sacrificing a polished line, which is exactly why they read so differently than a basic cotton short.





