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Thursday, June 30, 2011

History of the Wedding Dress (1900s – Now)


The Roaring 1920s Wedding Dresses

Wedding dress styles continued to be ruled by the royals and a little fashion designer from France who went by the name of Coco Chanel. Princess Mary married Viscount Lascelles in 1922 in a wedding dress similar to Lady Elizabeth Bows a.k.a Queen Elizabeth a.k.a the current Queen’s mother, who was one of Princess Mary’s bridesmaids. The 1920s was an age where women declared their independence after gaining the right to vote in August of 1920. Heavy ball gown wedding dresses were replaced by lighter straight lace and silk wedding dresses that were bias cut. Legendary fashion designer Coco Chanel introduced a totally new style by creating a short wedding dress with a long tulle train.

Queen Elizabeth a.k.a. Queen Mother is now a bride.

Short wedding dress with train made popular by Coco Chanel.

1930s Wedding Dresses

Barbara Hutton
Due to the depression and World War II, 1930s wedding dresses became less ornate and more like modern day women’s suits. Brides felt guilty spending a lot of money or dressing fancy for their wedding while the world was in turmoil. Barbara Hutton, the heiress to Woolworth, a discount department store like Walmart, marred Prince Alexis Mdivani of Georgia in Russia in 1933. Her bias cut floor length satin dress was very simple by royal standards. Wallis Warfield married King Edward the VIII of Britain in 1937 in a suit jacket and long skirt that mirrored the trend of simplicity and signified independence of women.
Wallis Warfield

1940s Wedding Dresses


Gloria Vanderbilt
More ornate dresses demanded the attention of the brides again after WWII ended in 1945. Brides wanted to feel like a princess by wearing long ball gowns again. Queen Elizabeth II married Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh on November 20, 1947. What made the influence of Queen Elizabeth II’s influence on wedding dress style was more powerful than any other royal wedding dress because it was the first royal wedding recorded on film. Queen Elizabeth II’s wore a floor length embroidered pure silk gown with pearl and crystal appliqués. Socialite Gloria Vanderbilt’s first wedding dress was as grand as her family fortune. You can see in this video that her full skirt of tulle was so large her husband had to help her control it. She wore a sweetheart bodice with cap sleeves and long white gloves. Gloria Vanderbilt later married CNN reporter Anderson Cooper‘s father.

Comedian Lucille Ball, star of I Love Lucy, also wore a ball gown of tulle and lace with sweet heart bodice at her wedding to Desi Arnaz.

1950s Wedding Dresses

Audrey Hepburn’s real wedding dresses versus her movie ones.
In the 50s, the wedding dresses became more fun, flirty and fuller, reflecting the poodle skirt craze of the 1950s. The epitome of elegance, actress Audrey Hepburn, wore different wedding dress styles in her movies and in her real wedding. In the 1954 movie Sabine, she wore a white strapless wedding dress with black embroidery. In another movie, Ms. Hepburn wore full tulle over chiffon skirt that fell just below the knee with a boat neck bodice and cap sleeves. Her first real wedding dress had a stylish high collar faux button-up bodice with a short full a-line skirt.
Not to be upstaged by Miss Hepburn, seven time bride Elizabeth Taylor married for the first time in the ’50s. We didn’t have the time or patience to find all of Elizabeth’s wedding dresses that spanned five decades.
Grace Kelly Marilyn Monroe
Legendary actress Grace Kelly wed in a beautiful lace, silk taffeta, tulle, wedding dress with long sleeves in 1956 and became Princess of Monaco. Marilyn Monroe, who was married to someone else a decade before, married New York Yankee Joe DiMaggio in a civil ceremony wearing a jacket and full skirt just like Elizabeth Taylor’s second wedding. It seems the trends for brides in the 1950s were to get married several times in order to wear every style of wedding dress available! Today, there are many strapless wedding dresses with black embroidery that brides can wear to their wedding while the two piece jacket and skirt wedding ensemble is reserved for the mother of the bride.

1960s Wedding Dresses

O Jackie! Jackie Bouvier was the American bride. Her wedding dress is probably the most copied wedding dress by American brides of the decade, perhaps of the century. The future Mrs. Jackie Kennedy, like Audrey Hepburn set the standard of elegance. First Lady Jackie Kennedy also made history because it was designed by Anne Lowe, an African-American seamstress who had designed all of her mother’s dresses.
Eartha Kitt Priscilla Presley
Other famous brides like Eartha Kitt, who’s best known for her sexy cat suit on the 1960s show Batman, wore a short-sleeved satin wedding dress with v-neck bodice and full skirt. Singer Elvis Presley married Priscilla Presley in 1967 who designed her own wedding dress. The dress was white silk chiffon with long lace sleeves similar to Queen Elizabeth’s a.k.a Queen Mothers dress in the 1920s.

Short and cute with a tiered pleated skirt described Yoko Ono’s wedding dress. Yoko Ono got married to The Beatles’ John Lennon in 1979. Variations of all of these women’s wedding dresses can be found on brides of the 1960s.

1970s Wedding Dresses


Actress Mia Farrow borrowed the mod theme of the 1960s, the short skirt of Yoko Ono and the suits of the 1940s by wearing a two piece suit at her wedding. President Nixon’s daughter, Tricia Nixon, was featured on the cover of Life magazine wearing a traditional a-line dress with a lace top in 1971.
Bianca Jagger wore a suit jacket by Yves Saint Laurent over her long white wedding skirt in the same year when she wed Rolling Stones rocker Mick Jagger. Charlie’s Angel and hairstyle icon Farrah Fawcett, got hitched to Lee Majors, star of the Six Million Dollar Man in a floppy hat like Bianca Jagger, but chose a billowy long- sleeved dress that went straight to the floor.
The Godfather Princess Caroline
Farrah’s dress reminds us of the dress worn by Michael Coroline’s sister in the opening scene of The Godfather. Princess Caroline of Monaco, daughter of Grace Kelly, wore a similar dress at her 1970s wedding.

1980s Wedding Dresses


Princess Diana set the style of the decade with her royal wedding dress designed by David and Elizabeth Emanuel. The world fell in love with Princess Diana and her floor length ivory silk wedding dress with poufy shoulders, lace v-neck with lace appliqué and a train that was long as a train. Okay, it was 26 feet long. Her wedding dress was reminiscent of a Victorian wedding dress with short cascading lace sleeves, empire waist and ball gown skirt.
Fergie Maria Shriver
Valerie Bertinelli Madonna
Fergie, not the Black Eyed Peas Fergie, but Fergie Duchess of York, wed in a Victorian satin gown with a round neckline edged with pearls designed by Linda Ciera. Her sleeves and train lacked all of the lace and appliqué of Princess Diana’s. Maria Shriver, part of the Kennedy clan, wed actor Arnold Schwarzenegger in a high neckline, long sleeved lace dress. Her dress was very similar to America’s sweetheart Valerie Bertinelli’s wedding dress worn when she wed rocker Eddie Van Halen. Of course, Madonna wanted to be unique when she wed actor Sean Penn in 1985 in lace sweetheart strapless ball gown.

1990s Wedding Dresses

Michelle Obama Mariah Carey
Women pretty much wore whatever they liked in this decade. Some brides wanted to be more modern in dresses that showed off their curves, while others like First Lady Michelle Obama and singer Mariah Carey liked the classic look of off -the-shoulder bodices, sweetheart necklines and ball gown skirts. Mariah Carey’s dress was designed by Vera Wang, while Michelle Obama’s dress designer is unknown.
Carolyn Bessette Jennifer Lopez
Every single woman wanted to marry John F. Kennedy, Jr., however the beautiful Carolyn Bessette caught his eye. Carolyn Bessette married John F. Kennedy. Jr. in a Narcisco Rodriguez sultry silk crepe wedding dress with spaghetti straps on November 16, 1996. Singer Jennifer Lopez’s wedding dress resembled Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s sexiness and style.

The ’00s and beyond

Madonna Jessica Simpson
The millennium of the strapless wedding dress began with Madonna in a beautiful silk strapless and corset bodice wedding dress made by Stella McCartney. In November 2000, singer Jessica Simpson continued the strapless trend in a Vera Wang dress with a sweetheart neckline at her wedding to singer Nick Lachey.
Catherine Zeta Jones Katie Holmes
Eva Longoria
In 2001, Catherine Zeta Jones wore a long sleeveless and beaded duchess satin wedding dress made by Christian Lacroix. The world had to wait a few more years for the next big celebrity wedding with Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise. In 2006, Katie Holmes chose a long Giorgio Armani off-the-shoulder lace dress with a scalloped bodice. Eva Longoria was the next celebrity wedding dress that every one got obsessed over. In 2007, she lived up to her status as fashion trendsetter by wearing a sleeveless long silk wedding dress by Angel Sanchez. At her civil ceremony, Eva wore a tulle Chanel dress with jacket which was similar to Mia Farrow’s 1960s wedding jacket.
Today, brides are using Nicole Richie and Chelsea Clinton for style inspiration. In a few months, brides and wedding dress designers will be inspired by the royal wedding of Kate Middleton and Prince William. We can’t wait!
-Stephanie Taylor

10 Wedding Dress Trends for 2012

10. Illusion Necklines


Carolina Herrera

9. Bolero Jackets


Tara Keely

8. Lingerie-Inspired Bustiers


Monique Lhuillier

7. Optional Ornate Belts


Anne Barge

6. Blush Wedding Dresses


Rivini

5. Cap Sleeves


Watters

4. Large Floral Details


Lazaro

3. Chantilly and Alencon Laces


Jenny Lee

2. Light Silk Fabrics Such as Taffeta and Organza


LianCarlo

1. Crinkle Chiffon Skirts

Friday, June 24, 2011

Celebrity Style for Your Wedding Day

-Jewelry and Style Expert, Michael O’Connor
Every bride should feel like a celebrity on her wedding day. Preparing for that walk down the aisle is really not that different than preparing for a trip down the red carpet. She will be photographed constantly throughout the day from every angle. All the details from the hair, makeup, dress and jewelry need to be planned and well thought out. So why not take a look at some recent red carpet looks for trends and ideas that will ensure that the bride always remains in the starring role.
Scarlett Johansson and Christina Aguilera show off post and pre '50s-style glam.

Flash to the Past

This year we’ve seen the simple Grecian gown styles from last year give way to embellishment with some highlight areas of beaded ornamentation. Concurrently, we’re starting to see a retro ’70s style surface, complete with longer sleeves, heavy beading throughout and, yes, the renewal of shoulder pads that would make Alexis Carrington Colby shriek with joy. This look through the rear-view mirror hasn’t stopped at the ’70s though. Due to television shows like Mad Men and films The Kings Speech, we’re looking back to the ’50s and beyond for fashion inspirations.
Dont' be afraid of all-over color.
Additionally, fashion designers are showcasing a variety of rich colors in their collections. We’ve seen some of the brightest stars today gravitate toward these looks: Angelina Jolie in green, Julianna Margulies in red and Mariska Hargitay in blue. For brides, this trend provides a wide variety of gown silhouettes to choose from, from simple sheath and trumpet shapes to the more elaborate ball-gown styles with lots of crystals and beading.
Helen's gorgeous statement necklace and Anne's return to shoulder pads.

Recent Red Carpet Trends

From an accessory standpoint the awards show season illustrated the move toward statement areas for styling. This is most likely in response to fashion designers keeping broad areas of a garment simple while adding larger, sometimes exaggerated ornamentation to one focal point. For example, the large red rose on Natalie Portman’s pink Victor and Rolf dress or Anne Hathaway’s Armani Prive shoulder pads, both from this year’s Golden Globes. The proportion of jewelry is evolving also, getting larger in order to keep up with fashions more important ornamentation. Stylists this year preferred larger statement necklaces such as Helen Mirren’s platinum and diamond Cartier necklace at the Golden Globes, or Amy Adams Academy Award large drop emerald and diamond necklace (also by Cartier), or stacked chunky bangles such as Halle Berry wore at the Golden Globes.
Amy Adam's colorful statement necklace can be used for a wedding look, too.

Think in Color

Like clothing, jewelry themes and colors ran from modern styling to retro, vintage pieces that stretched from simple white diamonds to bright juicy colored gems. For brides choosing a wedding look this gives plenty of styling options. If you’re wearing a white gown, think about bringing in one of your wedding color choices by using colored gemstones to create contrast and interest in your wedding look. Of course, the monochromatic all white look with sparking platinum and diamond jewelry will always be classic. If you’re a bolder bride and go with color in your wedding dress, either augment it or contrast it with a bold and richly colored gemstone piece.
January Jones' "Veronica Lake" hair.

Long Beautiful Hair

For hair and makeup recent red carpets revealed the same restraint as accessories. Overall makeup was sheer, creating a natural, healthy-looking base, with one chosen area of highlight, primarily the lips or eyes. Celebrities wowed us with dramatic heavier elongated eye treatments with rich black liner and colored eye shadows or voluptuous lips with pops of colors like red, orange and hot pink but rarely both. Hair was seen at a variety of lengths and styles. Short and fun, long and wavy, as well as formal up-do’s were popular this year. The hottest trend seen on celebrities seemed to be variations of the “Veronica Lake Style” hair, parted to the side and slightly curled to partially cover the face. Whether tresses were long or short actresses were working this look all season.
Hollywood red carpets are a great way to see the most current styles and trends. Use those trends to create a base on which to build an appropriate wedding style. The bride needs to wow them from the time she walks into the ceremony all the way through to her departure. So take some tips from the women who wow them on the red carpet regularly. The bride’s the star and this is her production!