Sarah Michelle Geller reveals her secret why she looks over

Sarah Michelle Geller reveals her secret why she looks over 5ft

Sarah Michelle Geller, who’s 5ft 4in, says she wears “magic pants” to add inches: “They actually make me look tall — or at least not extremely short.”

Sarah Michelle Gellar took to Instagram on Monday to show off her “magic” pants, which make her look taller.

The 1.6m tall actress, 45, revealed that her solution to giving the illusion of length is a pair of roomy, floor-length pants.

“These pants are magical,” she wrote in an Instagram Story sharing the same photo. “They actually make me look tall (or at least not extremely short)”.

She's serious: Sarah Michelle Gellar, 45, took to Instagram to show off her 'magic' pants that make her look taller on Monday

She’s serious: Sarah Michelle Gellar, 45, took to Instagram to show off her ‘magic’ pants that make her look taller on Monday

The star, best known for her role as Buffy Summers on the hit sci-fi drama series Buffy The Vampire Slayer, wore gray wide-leg pants.

They come from the Italian luxury fashion brand Brunello Cucinelli.

The Long Islander native wore a cream belt to secure pants at her waist and donned a simple white button fly for the complete business-casual look.

Makes a difference: The 1.6m tall actress revealed that her solution to giving the illusion of length is a pair of roomy, floor-length pants versus other hem lengths;  Seen December 6th in Santa Monica, California

Makes a difference: The 1.6m tall actress revealed that her solution to giving the illusion of length is a pair of roomy, floor-length pants versus other hem lengths; Seen December 6th in Santa Monica, California

She wore a pair of heels under her pants to give her the appearance of extra lift.

The actress – who plays Daphne in the Scooby-Doo live action films alongside real-life husband Freddie Prinze Jr., 46, as her on-screen partner Fred – has styled her blonde locks into a low ponytail.

She let her highlighted coins loose to frame her face.

Last week: She opened up about the toxic environment on the set of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, more than a year after her co-star Charisma Carpenter accused creator Joss Whedon of

Last week: She opened up about the toxic environment on the set of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, more than a year after her co-star Charisma Carpenter accused creator Joss Whedon of “hostile and toxic behavior.”

For makeup, she kept it simple but chic as she rocked a smoky eye and nude pink lip.

Last week, the Buffy the Vampire Slayer star broke her silence and spoke candidly about Joss Whedon’s “extremely toxic” set that pitted women against each other – the 1990s sci-fi series creator, 58.

This comes more than a year after her co-star Charisma Carpenter, 52, accused the creator of “hostile and toxic behavior”.

Gellar claimed women were “pitted against each other” during this period.

Too powerful: She added that female friendships are very discouraged because they are

Too powerful: She added that female friendships are very discouraged because they are “powerful”.

She added that female friendships are severely discouraged because they are too “powerful.”

She said that over the years she’s had to unlearn that it’s not normal for movie sets to be as toxic and rife with misogyny as common as it is.

“I’ve been on a set for so long that I think is known for being an extremely toxic male set,” she said.

“And so that was ingrained in my head that all the sets were like that and that women were being pitted against each other — that when women became friends, we became too powerful, so you had to keep that low,” she said.

“Now that I’ve had the opportunity to work with so many more women and men who are also supportive of women, I realized how simple an experience can be.”

She continued, “But…unfortunately we’re still in a place where all these departments often have to be women for us to have a voice.”

More to change: She said that

More to change: She said that “unfortunately we’re still in the place where all these departments often have to be women for us to have a voice.”