The Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants are cut with a wide leg opening that creates a dramatic silhouette from the hip downward. The key to this cut working is in the proportions: the rise is high enough to create length in the leg, and the leg opening is wide enough that the hem skims the floor rather than cutting off at an awkward mid-calf point. This isn't a slouchy wide leg — the drape is intentional, the leg falls straight rather than flaring or tapering. Available in Gray, Khaki.
Silhouette & Construction
- Cargo pocket configuration — more usable daily storage than standard pants without the bulk of tactical workwear
- Wide-leg cut from hip to hem — fluid drape without the stiffness of structured trousers, needs length at or near the floor to read correctly
- Ruched detailing — gathered fabric creates texture and a flattering camouflage effect simultaneously; one of the most universally wearable details across body types
- Available in sizes XXS, XS, S, M, L, XL — see the size guide below before ordering
- Comes in Gray, Khaki — each colorway has distinct styling potential depending on how casual or elevated you want the outfit to read
Fit & Sizing
Size to your hip measurement — the waist is secondary because the silhouette is relaxed by design. Length matters more with a wide leg than with any other cut: the hem needs to reach at or near the floor for the proportions to work. At a standard inseam, this style works for most people 5'5" and above with a flat shoe; shorter frames may need either a heel or a hem taken up 4–5cm. If you're ordering to wear flat, factor in the hem when choosing. Sizes: XXS, XS, S, M, L, XL.
How to Style
The wide leg cut needs length at the hem to work — it should reach at or near the top of the foot. A fitted or cropped top is essential: a long or loose top with wide-leg pants shortens the torso and creates a boxy silhouette. For petite frames, a heel helps — even 4–5cm adds the length the style needs. For taller frames, the cut works with flat shoes if the hem is long enough. Keep accessories minimal and in a single metal tone to avoid competing with the strong silhouette.
Fabric & Care
Machine wash cold on a gentle cycle — this is the single most important step for extending the life of any fashion fabric. Avoid high-heat tumble drying for the first 5–10 washes, which is when colour and fibre integrity are most vulnerable. Turn inside-out before washing to protect the outer face from friction and uneven fading.
| Size |
US |
Hip Size |
Inseam |
Length |
Waist Size |
| XXS |
0 |
35.4 |
30.3 |
41.3 |
23.6 |
| XS |
2 |
37.8 |
30.9 |
41.3 |
26 |
| S |
4 |
39.4 |
31.1 |
41.3 |
27.6 |
| M |
6 |
40.9 |
31.3 |
41.7 |
29.1 |
| L |
8/10 |
42.5 |
31.5 |
42.1 |
30.7 |
| XL |
12 |
44.1 |
31.7 |
42.5 |
32.3 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know before you buy
Wide leg pants often look different in person — how do I size the Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants correctly? +
Size to your hip measurement — the waist is less critical because the silhouette is relaxed by design. The length matters more than you'd think: wide leg pants need the hem to reach at or just above the floor to look intentional rather than cut-off. At a standard inseam length these work well for women 5'5" and above with flat shoes; shorter frames typically need either a heel or a simple hem taken up 4–5cm. If you're ordering to wear flat, factor in the hem when choosing.
The Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants are non-stretch cotton — how do they feel after a long day of wear? +
Non-stretch cotton has a structured, slightly board-like feel when new that softens significantly after 2–3 wears and washes. By the end of the first week the fibers relax and the fabric drapes against the body rather than holding its shape away from it. What non-stretch cotton does well that stretch blends can't match: it holds the cut of the pant through a full day without sagging at the knee or seat.
Do the Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants work for a pear shape — wider hips and thighs relative to waist? +
These are well-suited to pear and hourglass shapes. Size to your hip measurement: the hip and thigh fit is fixed, the waist can be adjusted with a belt or taken in slightly if needed. For a pear shape, the most common issue with non-stretch bottoms is the gap at the back waistband when the hips are larger relative to the waist — a belt solves this quickly. The key measurement to get right is the thigh circumference, not the waist: if the thigh fits comfortably, the rest of the sizing logic follows.
Will the Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants shrink in the wash, and how do I prevent it? +
Cold wash on a gentle cycle and line dry: shrinkage is 0–1% and undetectable in practice. The risk is machine drying on high heat — non-stretch cotton can lose up to a full size in the waist after five cycles of hot-wash-plus-high-heat drying. A single warm wash won't cause noticeable shrinkage and can actually help break in the fabric faster if the stiffness of new cotton bothers you. Turn them inside-out before washing to protect the outer surface and prevent uneven fading in darker colours.
How does the ruched detail on the Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants look across different body types? +
Ruching is one of the most universally flattering details in fashion because it creates texture that draws the eye and simultaneously camouflages the area underneath — the gathered fabric creates visual interest without revealing exact contours. At the waist, ruching creates the illusion of a more defined waist even without a cinched fit. At the leg it creates texture that breaks up the plain silhouette.
Are the Casual Ruched Wide Leg Cargo Pants long enough for taller frames — do they hit the right length at 5'8"+? +
At 5'8" the standard inseam on most styles hits just at or slightly above the ankle, which reads as a deliberate cropped length rather than too-short. At 5'10"+ there's usually a 3–5cm gap between the hem and the floor, which looks intentional in wide-leg or jogger styles but can look abruptly short in straight-leg or formal styles. The practical answer: check the listed inseam length against your body measurement (floor to hip) minus the rise, and if the result is under your inseam length, the pants will work.