Color options for your bridal gown

All the colors can be your options for your wedding dress, not only white, spread your envision, and have your selection. Let’s listen to what the famous designer said.
Designer wedding dresses can be just considered as a given, but it doesn’t have to be. We asked Carol McD. Wallace, author of All Dressed in White: the Irresistible Rise of the American Wedding (Penguin Original, 2004), for a quick history lesson. She advises that we don’t need to worry about following in the tradition of Queen Victoria. “The white informal wedding gowns for every bride are really a post-World War II phenomenon. Before that, lots of girls would invest in a simple wedding dress they could wear again,” she says. “In pioneer America, that often meant black, brightened up with some white lace or artificial orange blossoms; during World War II, brides often wore a pretty suit with a corsage.” Wallace also believes that you shouldn’t worry too much about the symbolic value of white.” Lots of virgin brides have worn colors and we see lots of brides with children wearing white, so I think the color issue is up for grabs. If you feel fabulous in green or any other colors, then go for it!” We wholeheartedly agree, and so do wedding dress designers! Big names like Amsale and Ely Saab have been sending bolder and brighter hues down the runway in recent years, so don’t be surprised if you see more brides coming over to color in the future.
Champagne is a beautiful color as a fashion, do you like it?

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