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Our founder chooses her favourite pieces for the new season Get inspired for the new season with ourEvery woman knows from bitter experience the hell of the changing room. We’ve all been there. You find the perfect dress, try it on and it looks sublime. Then you get home and look in your own mirror and discover it’s actually a disaster.Then there’s the other scenario. You find the perfect dress, try it on and you look like a sack of spuds, flee in tears and head straight for a tub of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream. Would the same dress look beautiful at home? Both situations can leave a woman in despair. Why is it that some changing room mirrors seem to take a dress size off you and others add two? I decided to find out. Luscious or lumpy: The mirror at H&M (left) was particularly flattering, while the overhead lighting at John Lewis (right) was unforgivingI wore the same dress — an unforgiving ice-blue jersey number — to have my photograph taken in the changing rooms in ten of Britain’s top High Street stores.

The results were astounding.Looking at the pictures, it could be a different woman in these shots. In some I look willowy, in others like a pregnant hobbit.My investigation was helped by Dr Melissa Kao, director of Magic Mirror, which supplies innovative camera mirrors to retailers such as Harrods and River Island.‘Shops sometimes employ tiny tricks to make you look as good as possible, which include tilting mirrors upwards. This elongates the look of the body,’ she reveals.‘The mirror may appear flat against the wall — but even a tilt of just a couple of millimetres can be enough to give a bit of extra length to the legs.’Dr Kao also says mirrors may have slightly different tints, some of which will give the face a more healthy glow.‘Shops often use a “ring flash” where strip lighting creates a halo effect — much like you’d see in those old-fashioned make-up mirrors set with bulbs. It gives a shadow-free reflection and an even complexion,’ she says.They say the camera never lies, but the one thing I’ve learnt is that changing room mirrors do.

Contrast: Gap's (left) mirrors left Amanda feeling pretty normal, but Topshop (right) made her look more like a Lithuanian shot-putter, she said Gap has been a favourite of mine for years for its honest and simple clothes. I look pretty normal here, with a bit of a fat tummy. The cubicle was spacious and they had a ‘help’ button. I didn’t need it. As one of my male friends is fond of saying: ‘I wouldn’t chuck her back.’ This good-sized — 5ft 1in x 4ft 3in — oval-shaped and white changing room creates a reasonably natural reflection and a daylight-like feel. The two whiteish strip lights set behind the mirror make another ring flash, banishing shadows and evening out complexion. I know this is supposed to be a shop for teenagers, but how many of them could withstand this harsh reality? I look like a Lithuanian shot-putter hiding her money belt around her waist. This large mirror, measuring 8ft 3in x 3ft 3in, runs from ceiling to floor and is flat against the wall with a large fluorescent light directly above your head.

Without other lights to diffuse around the immediate area and soften the look, all your imperfections will be very much on show. This cubicle was near perfect. It was roomy, had soft overhead and front lighting, and was flattering overall. Though I did detect a bit of trickery as it made me look a size ten, not 12. This shows how investment in mirrors can really pay off.Two yellow strip lights set into either side of the mirror create an excellent ring flash effect — and makes Amanda’s waist look more slender.Floor space measures 3ft 10in by 4ft, giving plenty of room. A combination of off-white walls and a small mirror to the left further disperse soft light throughout the cubicle. The garment and face look airbrushed.They should be done by Trading Standards for their motto: ‘Never knowingly undersold.’ The overhead lighting was unforgiving and the mirror, well, let’s just say I sincerely hope this is not what I look like in real life. There was a button for help and I hope that included a psychiatrist.

This mirror sits absolutely — and unflatteringly — flat to the wall in this changing room, which measures 3ft 6in x 4ft 7in.The lighting is far too strong. Two LED spotlights and one strong fluorescent light beam down from overhead and mercilessly emphasise every imperfection, adding years to the face and rucks and folds to a previously smooth-looking frock.When light falls downwards onto, for example, the very slight curve of a stomach, it creates a dramatic shadow beneath, making Amanda look lumpy. Though the cream colour of the wall slightly softens the glare, the dark grey curtain doesn’t help, as this absorbs rather than reflects light. Light versus dark: The mirrors in Debenhams (left) gave a fair reflection of Amanda's look, where as Zara's (right) lighting threw shadows over her stomach I have to admit this is a pretty fair reflection of me. No washboard stomach, a hint of Jonny Wilkinson’s thighs, you can even see where my undies cut into my hips. I should have worn a pair of Spanx.

The full-length mirror is the smallest of them all and ends just a few inches above the head, which makes you look a teensy bit taller. The room measures 4ft 8in x 5ft 8in, giving plenty of space to see your reflection from a realistic distance. If you were chatting to someone on the street this is how you’d probably look to them — as long as you were wearing heels! Initially I loved the large dressing room, which could easily fit four friends in as well, but the lighting was horrendous, throwing shadows over my tummy. I looked as if I’d not only eaten all the pies, but stuffed a few down my dress for later. The fitting rooms appear elegant, with plenty of space — the floor is 7ft 8in x 3ft 4in — but they are inexplicably fitted out in shades of grey, with dark charcoal curtains and light grey walls. These colours absorb light and produce an unforgiving reflection. The overhead spotlights create appalling shadows. This ages the complexion and every lump and bump is exacerbated.

Fenwick (left) or Fraser? The former store left our reporter looking stunning, House of Fraser's (right) mirrors made her look considerably older Flawless skin, hardly a hint of turkey neck and Elle Macpherson’s body — I’d love to think this is how I really look. Forget the rest of the shopping — I want to buy this changing room mirror! A genius changing room, measuring 4ft 11in x 3ft 6in. The mirror appears to be fabricated from what we call low iron.All mirrors contain iron, and this gives a very faint greenish tinge to skin. If there’s less iron present the mirror gives more of a healthy and natural glow.The yellow lighting complements this — there is a spotlight above the mirror and a flattering ring flash created by two long yellow strip lights behind either side of the mirror. What can I say? I look like a run-to-seed drag queen. This was the most depressing changing room, cramped and with horrid lighting. I looked fat, it bleached my face, ageing me ten years, and made my hair resemble straw.

The room measures 3ft 10in x 4ft 9in. It looks as though the mirror is slightly tilted forwards from the top, shortening the legs, but on closer inspection the problem is clearly the large bright spotlight directly above the head, which looks well over 100 watts (normal household lights are more like 40 watts).The colour of the dress is bleached out — and the merest curve looks positively gargantuan. Comparison: M&S (left) was less appealing than the mirrors and lighting in Selfridges (right), which somehow appeared to make Amanda look taller My 30-year love affair with M&S almost ended in this changing room.The store was full of tempting new arrivals, then into this reverse Tardis, which was squashed and badly lit.Note to boss Marc Bolland — why spend so much time designing fabulous, affordable clothes just to put us into the cubicle from hell, which would only make us change our minds about buying them. At 2ft 10in x 3ft 8in this is the smallest changing room.Where the shadows fall and the size of the room mean you probably need to stand closer to the mirror, which is set flat against the wall.

This means you’re probably going to get a frustrating and unflattering view.There is huge discrepancy between the price of mirrors from shop to shop. This would probably only be about £100, but a more expensive one with rose tinting — where a reddish mineral, selenium dioxide, is added to give a rosy glow — would cost more like £2,000 and make you look and feel like a million dollars.I looked positively youthful and glowing, with hardly a lump or bump in sight. And somehow I looked not only six inches taller, but a dress size smaller. Two long yellowy strip lights run down either side of the mirror, creating that flattering ring flash effect. Here it cinches in Amanda at the waist as the light focuses the eye on the centre of the mirror.Though there is some ring flash with other lighting, only Selfridges and H&M had the strip lights set in front of the mirror, which probably explains why they were the most effective.Generous cubicle dimensions — 4ft 5in x 4ft 11in — mean that you can stand further away from the mirror and get a clear view of exactly what the outfit looks like.