Postpartum Clothing

Postpartum clothing for the body you actually have in the weeks and months after birth, not the one a marketing brief assumes. Soft fabrics, generous cuts, feeding access where you need it, and silhouettes that flatter the version of your body that exists right now. Investment pieces designed for the fourth trimester and beyond.

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Dressing the chapter nobody warns you about

The fourth trimester is the one most maternity wardrobes ignore. Your body is changing daily. Your old clothes don't fit yet and may not for some time. Maternity clothes are loose in the wrong places. You are healing, possibly feeding, possibly recovering from a caesarean, and almost certainly not in the mood to compromise on how you feel in your clothes. Apéro's postpartum collection is built for this specific chapter. Soft jerseys, ribbed knits, adjustable waistbands, breastfeeding-friendly access, and silhouettes that skim rather than cling. The pieces in this edit are designed to make you feel like yourself again on the days when nothing else will.

The collection covers the practical layers: knit lounge sets that work for hospital and the first weeks home, postpartum-friendly pants with elastic and adjustable waists, breastfeeding-friendly tops and dresses for the months of recovery, and longer-line wraps and layers for cooler weather. Matching maternity sets include coordinated tops and bottoms ideal for the first week's home. Many of the pieces also work through pregnancy, which means the value extends across the full motherhood timeline. Apéro builds postpartum into the design brief from the start, not as an afterthought. For more practical advice, see our pants for endometriosis guide, which covers similar fit principles for sensitive postpartum bodies.

Frequently asked questions

  • What you should wear postpartum is layered, soft, and adjustable. The first two weeks are typically loose jersey or knit sets, comfortable bras, and high-rise pants that sit above any caesarean incision. From weeks three to six, structured wraps, drop-waist midis, and feeding-friendly tops become useful. Beyond six weeks, you can introduce more tailored pieces. The unifying principle: nothing should press on your stomach, and feeding access should be quick if you are breastfeeding. Your wardrobe should accommodate the body you have right now, not the body you used to have.

  • How long it takes to fit back into normal clothes varies enormously between mothers. Some women fit pre-pregnancy clothes by three months. Others take twelve months and beyond. Some never go back to the same size and proportions, and that is also normal. The honest answer is to not plan around a timeline. Invest in transitional postpartum pieces that work for the body you have right now, and let the rest happen on its own schedule. Comfort during recovery matters more than fitting a specific date, and forcing the timeline rarely works.

  • Yes, postpartum clothing is different to maternity clothing in several important ways. Maternity clothing accommodates a forward bump with extra length and stretch across the front. Postpartum clothing accommodates a softer, broader middle, often a different bust size from feeding, and recovering core muscles. Many pieces overlap, particularly empire-waist dresses and adjustable wide-leg pants. But a good postpartum piece is cut for after delivery, not during pregnancy. The two wardrobes serve different bodies even though some pieces work for both.

  • The clothes and postpartum recovery essentials you need for after birth start with a small starter kit. Two or three pairs of high-rise soft pants with elastic waists, three feeding-friendly tops, one or two knit lounge sets, a wrap dress or feeding-friendly dress, and a comfortable layered jumper for cooler weather. Add a structured piece for any early outings. Anything more specific than this can wait until you know what your body and routine look like. Over-shopping before delivery often means buying pieces that don't fit the postpartum body you end up with.

  • Yes, you can wear maternity clothes after giving birth, and some pieces work brilliantly. Empire-waist dresses, wide-leg adjustable trousers, and feeding-friendly maternity pieces translate seamlessly into postpartum wear. Tight ruched-bump maternity tees usually don't translate, because the ruching shapes for a forward bump and looks distorted on a postpartum body. The pieces in our postpartum-friendly range are designed to work across both chapters, which is a deliberate choice. The most-worn pieces in many postpartum wardrobes are maternity pieces that were bought with both chapters in mind.