Fun fact: white has been traditional for Jewish weddings (particularly Ashkenazi) longer than for xtian weddings. But in Jewish weddings white doesn't have the creepy misogynist "I have an intact hymen" symbolism. Both the bride and groom wore white for the same reason we frequently wear white for Yom Kippur: to symbolize a blank sheet of parchment with all of our recorded sins erased. A couple's wedding day is supposed to be their own personal Yom Kippur, and Orthodox couples will still fast until after the ceremony, so that they go into their new life together with a blank slate, or blank parchment, with all of their sins from their individual lives erased.
See I like this tradition so much better! . . . but I'm still not wearing white if I ever get married, I will look like a corpse. And cool as the Jewish corpse bride folk tale is, it's not my vibe 🤣
I read a post apocalyptic story once (*maybe* by Joan Aiken??? ) where brides wore yellow to symbolise the wish for some sunshine in their future (so much pollution meant sunny days were rare in this story).
@@SnappyDragon you would, however, look stunning in ivory. (My mother got married again at the age of 75. She wore a white cocktail dress and a hat with a veil, and looked appropriate and lovely. My brother and I walked her down.)
In Korea, it was traditional to wear red at the wedding. Those dresses were *heavily* embroidered so there was no way you could upstage a bride Fun fact: those particular dresses were only reserved for royalty, but peasant girls were allowed to wear them on their wedding day so they can be a princess for a day. There was a dedicated place where those wedding clothes were kept and you could go borrow them for your wedding ceremony
That sounds lovely. In Sweden we usually had a bridal crown in silver (in the parish church) that a woman could borrow for her wedding. That's still possible to do in many places.
Scandinavian folk clothes including bridalwear usually have a lot of black in them. My folkdräkt has a black wool skirt and a red bodice and the apron and all the accessories have a bunch of different colours. The costumes are usually mostly black and red and the embroidery and jewellery and details are very colourful.
This is so interesting! My great grandmother moved to the US from Finland at around age 20, and married here in the 1920s in a black dress with handkerchief hem. I always heard it was so that she could continue to wear it to church and funerals, but it's neat to hear that also fit with her cultural background! (I got to see the dress when my aunt wore it for her wedding ~2000. She changed into a short red dress for the reception.)
First time I met my husbands family they gave my 6 year old son strawberries, so they won't remember anything else but the sight of his allergic reaction 😅, we didn't know he was allergic, so it was memorable but not in a good way. ❤
I remember hearing that, although blue had been used as a symbol of purity in earlier times, Victoria decided against it as blue (as a symbol of purity) was the colour most commonly associated with pictures of the Virgin Mary, and she didn’t want to be seen as a Catholic sympathiser. Red (the colour of life and fertility) had also often been worn at wedding, but Victoria had worn red for her coronation, and wanted her wedding to be seen as a union between man and wife, not Queen and subject. She chose white because it held no symbolism at all, so couldn’t be misconstrued. After the royal wedding, all the brides wanted to wear white because that was what the Queen had worn.
I think that one of the reasons for weddings being fancy could be that marriage was a huge deal, a change of life, a relationship that was meant to be for the rest of their lives. Even a change in dress, the way the women wore their hair and how they covered their hair could change. In Sweden similar things also happened after the adolescents confirmation in church, where the young girls started to wear their hair up afterwards
As a former wedding photographer, my advice is to follow the cues of your invitation (the printing, any instructions, the type of venue), what folks involved in the wedding are saying about how the wedding party is approaching the wedding (my/our big day or joy-centered celebration), and just don't overdo it. Also, wear shoes that you can be in for the whole day and reception or have a change of shoes in the car for between the wedding and reception. Simple flats or sandals are fine if heels do not love your feet!
Thankfully I know the couple getting married quite well-- they're basically planning a weekend of folk-dancing, so I'll pack three or four dance dresses and some comfy clothes for mornings. And dance shoes, of course!
In addition to Asian weddings usually being red, the traditional color in Sudan is red and I have some evidence that red was the traditional Egyptian color too. Additionally, both 19th century Egypt and current Sudan had traditional bridal shawls imported from India! The Sudanese one is a plsid with gold, red, blue, and other colors, called a Garmasis, and the Egyptian one was a red Kashmir shawl draped to hide the bride from view, with a few pieces of jewelry attached on the outside. In Morroco, the traditional dress was called "the Great dress", and was made of red velvet with gold embroidery.
Fun fact for you…Mary Queen of Scots wore a white wedding dress for her wedding day to the Dauphin of France. It was said to be richly made the color of ivory with orange blossoms and Lilies, can’t remember which kind, embroidered on it. People who witnessed were said to be shocked and were in awe of her choice of color. I don’t know why I know this, just a random tidbit of trivia. Have fun at the wedding whatever you wear, I dig purple, it’s my jam. Cheers❤
If I remember correctly that far back in history it was either white or yellow was actually a mourning color in france. But I may be remembering wrong.
Late 60s and my best friend who got married thought about that but she could only afford a polyester one that one couldn't dye. I had the usual hot pink frou frou dress that no one would ever wear in public again.
One of the things I read (not 19thC, later) mentioned that white wedding dresses truly became ubiquitous in the 30s-40s because of the availability of cheaper rayon and synthetic materials for them.
@@SnappyDragon My parents got married in December 1951 and they both purchased new suits for the occasion. Mom’s was black. They were both in their 30s at the time and it was their first and only marriage.
In Japanese traditional weddings, the bride changed several times - she would arrive and be welcomed in a formal furisode, the garment of unmarried women, adorned with the crest of her maiden family. She'd then change into a Shirokakeshita, a white kimono and accessories, to drink the nuptial wine - there is a bit of debate about the symbolism of the white, some say it's for purity, some say it's to show the transition from her old 'colours' to her new family's 'colours', some say it's to mourn her childhood/life with her parents. (I see the purity meaning a lot more in newer sources and have my suspicions that it's mostly seeped over from Western exposure.) Depending on the culture and religion being observed, she may also wear either a fancy red and gold Uchikake over-robe for good fortune, or a white one. After the main ceremony, she'd then change again into a new adult woman's formal kimono, normally a Tomesode with her new family's crest on it, and be introduced to the new relations and friends of the groom's family as a married woman while wearing this kimono. There are of course lots of variations, and during the Edo period the bright might have changed at least her accessories and outer layers 5+ times! Nowdays the bridal outfits can be anywhere from full ultra-traditional Shinto with multiple changes to a completely modern/western gown, and there are so many fun and interesting hybrid styles and variations that people create in the space in between.
Back when I was planning my own wedding, I remember reading somewhere that BLUE was originally the color associated with purity, because of its association with the Virgin Mary. I thought about having a blue wedding dress since I look good in blue, but ended up loving a beautiful ivory peau de soie gown. Maybe for our tenth anniversary next year we'll do a vow renewal and I'll wear blue!
My grandma wore blue for her wedding. It was a shocking choice for her because she's mennonite, and up until those days (the 50s) women only got married in black. But my grandma refused to get married in a mourning dress.
That's fascinating about blue wedding dresses. My grandma's wedding dress was light blue (1936). I had always assumed that since it was during the depression that she couldn't afford to buy a fancy white dress, and instead wore her best dress.
We had a hike-in wedding and now I never want to attend another fancy dress wedding again. No pomp, just comfy clothes, good times with friends, and all the dogs and kids. 12/10, would recommend 😄
I do really love "unconventional" weddings like that. I'd much rather go to a ceremony and party that reflects who the spouses are and what matters to them, than something they're "supposed" to do.
My husband has a book with photos of his ancestors from about 1890 when they came over from Norway and settled in the American Midwest. As the men got married, each of their brides wore the exact same purple gown initially belonging to the husbands' sister (photos are sepia, but a family member kept a journal) that was temporarily altered for her. So there's a decade's worth of photos from 8 different weddings where there's different couples, same dress.
Bridal costumes in European folk costume can get pretty wild. I went to a folk costume museum in Serbia last year and some of the bridal outfits were covered in coins or involved insanely elaborate headdresses.
I always love seeing these! It really goes to show just how limited our idea of "Western" or "European" fashion is, that so many regional styles got overwritten by English/French fashions.
I've been to a *LOT* of family weddings, christnings and funerals. I wear what I want (though I've never worn white except as a shirt/blouse). My family members have come to formal ceremonies wearing everything from suits and full formal gowns to tracksuits in bright pink (yes, I've seen that at a funeral). Aside from the variations of traditional wedding dresses, there have been brides dressed in pastel "office suits" (one in slacks) with a lacy or floral-topped facinator. One cousin and her bridesmaids wore camo and jeans. Most of my cousins don't care what you wear, they're just happy you showed up. Re: Black at a wedding. I've worn a black dress to a wedding (floral fabric). I went with my Grandmother and Aunt to pick a dress out, and I came out of the dressing room and they both said "That's lovely, you look charming."- and my Aunt was a stickler for proper etiquette.
To preface: I really love my mother in law even though she can sometimes be a lot, especially when she’s excited about something. So when I was planning my wedding I remember her being almost horrified that my mother was planning to wear a black dress. I couldn’t have cared less, especially since the dress suited my mom’s typical style. And I wanted her to feel comfortable in what she wore. The funniest part about it to me was that my mother in law wore this dark navy dress that I would have mistaken for black if she hadn’t had that reaction to my mother’s dress color.
Ahahahaha. This is why we really need to stop making assumptions like this about what color people are wearing. If I want to ill-wish someone's wedding, I wouldn't wear black, I'd go full Maleficent and show up with a dragon or something 🤣
Of course you know better, but I could imagine that she chose such a dark color so she would blend in with your mom’s choice. I know my mother in law thought it important to coordinate with my mom.
My Dutch grandmother wore a dark silk dress for her wedding in the early 1920s. Many European Catholic traditions had the bride wear a new dark dress to indicate her new status, with a change of headdress style to further reinforce the message.
My Dutch grandmother married in black, because she was in mourning over her father's death. The wedding had to happen soon though, can't have the farm be without a man on it
I once wore a lovely warm-red dress, as in, not siren red but slightly darker (but not burgundy) and then the bride turned up and was wearing the exact same shade of red - LOL!! Never knew about the orange blossoms, btw. I know I saw them mentioned in books etc. but didn't realise how significant they were for brides.
Oof, yes! I feel like this is why if one cares about people not matching the spouses, they ought to say so on the invitations or otherwise make it very clear.
My paternal grandmother wore a purple dress to her wedding. Family lore is divided on her reasoning when white was the standard by then (maternal gran wore white), with some thinking it was a Sunday Best situation, others thinking it had to do with some patriarchy-induced shame about bad things that happened to her as a very young child. My hope is that it was an intentional choice to spite her uptight family.
My grandmother and her sister both got married in 1930, a few months apart, and went in very different directions. Aunt Julia’s dress was a beautifully elaborate white confection with a fabulous beaded cloche hat and veil. Gram’s dress was a very pretty but practical brown velvet that was her ‘fancy’ dress for years afterward. These were not wealthy people, farming/mill working family in upstate New York. I think it was just a question of personalities and priorities. Julia wanted fancy, and she got it. It really was a great dress! Gram splashed out in other ways but was always practical and not super concerned about clothes. On an amusing note, their father brought out his dandelion wine for Gram’s October wedding, but not for Julia’s in July. Whether he didn’t like Julia’s husband as much or the wine just wasn’t ready at the time, I have no idea, but Gram said her wedding was quite the party!
I have a fashion plate, from 1869. The bride is wearing a blue underskirt and a lot of froof in white. It's quite low cut, like a ballgown. The bridesmaid (aged about 7) is wearing a white petticoat with a pink jacket, and what looks like the matron of honour (I am guessing it's the bride's married sister) is wearing a very stylish light brown silk. PS green is deemed to be bad luck because it's the colour of The Good Ones, and you might have them steal the bride
That sounds like a lovely plate! Do you know where the superstition about green being the color of the Fair Folk comes from? I've read that in some places it was one of the many preferred colors for brides, because it symbolized fertility and new beginnings.
@@SnappyDragon not really, it's just something I grew up with. It could just be my family, most of whom are of Scottish, Irish, and Scandinavian descent. But They are renowned for living in green mounds and the two strange children of Woolpit had green skin. Until they had spent enough time away from their home.
Yes, we scandinavians did wear black wedding dresses!! I haven't read too much on the topic, but it's still a tradition in some southern regions where traditional dress still lingers as festive wear.
The only thing I know about weddings is something I read in Emily Post from last century, A new bride wears white, if she gets married again she wears Ivory and a third time Turquoise. She doesn't say what comes next. I guess, Honey three times, just give up.
Ooooh! That’s so intriguing! I have a cream dress I married my husband in and then for our tenth anniversary I altered the dress so I could wear it again (weight gain from 21-31 is completely normal but the dress had a zipper and was brocade, so no stretching capability), but I’m planning a vow renewal for the 20 year mark and I’m planning on wearing garb and so is he. My current best warm weather dress is turquoise! So now I just need to finish the embellishment on it and then I’ll be fine if the weather is warm enough
A few years ago, we were invited to a steampunk festival and to attend a friend's Wiccan handfasting that was being held as part of the festival programme. I made myself and hubby lovely steampunk outfits for the occasion. When we got there we were invited to be part of the bridal party which was lovely except that everyone else in the party was wearing "elven " style dresses so we stood out in our steam punk clothes.
My mother's father passed away suddenly, shortly before her wedding. She didn't feel like wearing a traditional wedding dress, so she wore a light grey suit. She looked lovely.
I only recall attending one Jewish wedding. The couple was late because they had to find a minyan en route to the site. The ceremony took place outdoors, in the summer, with little to no shade. The ceremony itself and lunch afterwards was more about impressing the in-laws than anything else. I guess the in-laws were fans of brief ceremonies and bland food. From what I gather, most Jewish weddings are better planned and more celebratory.
Some years back (the 1980s) my immediate supervisor -- and friend -- was criticized for an outfit choice to wear to a wedding by her sister because it was white. I saw it and it was not entirely white, but blue and white striped! Needless to say, I was appalled by her sister's criticism especially when her sister was going to wear black lace! P.S.: Fast forward 40 years later -- I think that the black and white dress you pulled out is charming!
ngl I was a little relieved when my friends' wedding was postponed due to covid (they still got married but just went to the courthouse alone), because it's given me more time to think about what I want to wear as a nonbinary person in the wedding party.
@@danielalaatz57 it actually still hasn't happened yet lol. the original plan of pushing it back 1 year did work for international wedding party members reasons, so they decided to wait until their 5th or 7th anniversary to celebrate. which means I still haven't decided on what I'm wearing
@@nyves104 I hope you find something you feel good in. Actually, as we got married during Covid restrictions with a very small party, we were thinking about having a nice big party for our 5th anniversary. If you have any input I would live Ideas for inclusive dresscode. Although I think everyone who knows us will just wear what they feel comfortable in anyhow.
I think the white dress she held up gets even more of a free pass because most women get married in floor length dresses made of nonpatterned fabric. But also it's a gay wedding so who cares? It looks cute!
Oh yeah, I would have no concern for that dress being mistaken for a bridal dress-- it's part of why I used it as an example of how ridiculous this standard can be!
A lot of the instances I have come across regarding colors that shouldn't be worn, are rules for A holes who are going to show up in white to try and upstage the bride, or black funeral attire to show they are morning the marriage. A case of crazy is going to crazy but at least every else can know they are crazy.
Yeah, it seems like attaching these meanings just gives people a way to either pick at others, or express the sort of self-centered behavior that they'd find a way to do so anyways. If you're that upset at a wedding happening . . . maybe don't go?
If I remember correctly, the bodice that the cut of the nordlandsbunad (from Vefsn, roughly in the middle of Norway) is modelled after was/is black, and that was originally the bodice of a wedding dress. As for what uniquely differentiated the bride, it was her headwear: she might wear a wreath of myrtle flowers, or even a crown.
It makes a lot of sense to have the bride identified by a headdress rather than specific type of dress! Much less resource-intensive to make a headdress than an entire outfit only for getting married in.
@@SnappyDragon There were women who were "bride dressers" and they would lend the crown, and sometimes also the dress, to the bride. The crowns I've seen are very large and colorful, with pieces of colored paper dangling from the top.
My Finnish maternal grandmother wore all black to her rural wedding in the late 1930s. She was born in 1917 in a part of Karelia that became a part of Russia after WW2. On the other hand, my Swedo-Finnish paternal grandmother wore all white to her wedding, in the mid-1930s. She was born in 1907 in Helsinki, our capitol, where she also got married.
My Dutch grandmother married in black, because she was in mourning over her father's death. The wedding had to happen soon, because there just had to be a man on the farm..
I found it really interesting that none of these books had much to say about if the bride was in mourning! It had to have been something that happened, but I didn't see any specific suggestions for it.
My maternal granny was born in Helsinki in 1907, and wore her best outfit when she married my grandfather in 1940. They were both working class, and didn't have the money for fancy wedding clothes. My paternal granny also wore her best outfit for her wedding in 1946, because working class and post war rationing.
When we were planning our wedding (lo these many years ago) I was horrified when the guy from the shul suggested using a light bulb instead of a wine glass for my new husband to crush "because it makes a louder noise." The reason for the wine glass (as far as i can tell) is because it's a symbol of celebration and we are reminding ourselves that until the Holy Temple is rebuilt all are celebrations are tempered by the remembrance of the destroyed Holy Temple.
The only things I know for sure about dressing for a wedding is that white is for the bride only, red means you either have slept with, tried to, or are currently trying to sleep with the groom, and black is for funerals only (especially in more conservative Catholic families). I also read somewhere once that if a woman shows up in white, the bridesmaids are required to pour red wine on the dress, but I cannot find a source for that, so grains of salt and all that. I think the coolest little thing I found planning my own wedding is that for most Spanish-speaking countries it's more common for brides to have fans as opposed to bouquets, and as a Mexican fan enthusiast I am absolutely using this as an excuse to shop for new fans both for myself and my party. In addition, one thing we're doing to incorporate my fiance's Italian heritage, I'm letting him pick out my fan as traditionally, the groom will present the bride with a bouquet before they walk down the aisle together. I'm also opting for a more traditional mantilla style veil, as it seems to me the most versatile option as both a cultural and dressier piece of outerwear, and a small antique silver peineta from the region in Mexico part of my family is from instead of the "western" tiara. Doing the research into customs from our cultures, it's interesting to see what's been around since Roman/precolonial times, what was brought in by the church, and what was brought into vogue by Queen Victoria, but for me at least, it's about us declaring to the world that we choose each other and celebrating afterwards, so the artistic things we chose to keep and get rid of are really about who we are and where we came from more than any other significance.
In Bengali culture, brides wear red, so as a wedding guest, I won't wear red or anything that could be close to it. The only exception was when I attended a wedding during lockdown through a video call, and the bride was wearing pink, so my orange shalwar kameez (that can look red at certain angles) didn't seem like I was upstaging the bride.
"Some people have nothing better to do than be judgemental" When I got married, we both wore black. And we asked our guests to wear black and shades of purple. (With the exception of my grandma who felt uncomfortable in black, so we agreed another colour was just fine.) Some complete stranger decided to berate my brand new sisters in law for wearing black, because "you can't wear the same colour as the bride!". Yep, some people clearly have nothing better to do. Whatever you wear, I hope you have fun at the wedding and that your friends have a beautiful life together. Great video as always!
In Norway, bridesmaids tend to be little girls, so them matching the bride is hardly going to cause any confusion. Besides, the bride is usually the only one with flowers in her hair (a veil, although traditional since pre-Christian times, is definitely optional nowadays, and even if one is worn it usually doesn’t cover the face).
Both grooms? Nice. As a fellow redhead, I would say a nice dark color like a dark blue or purple. Because light colors seem to wash us out. But if you are one of the rare redheads who can pull off pink? Go for pink!
I second dark blue, that tends to go well with red hair. Or green, although that might give wood elf/Merida vibes (which isn't necessarily a bad thing). Depending on how close one is with the soon-to-be-wedded, the easiest way is to send them a picture of what you want to wear and ask if thats ok with them. Problem solved🥳
Ooooh I do have a pink dress that would work really well, from the Ora Lin Robin blouse pattern! I'll add that to the list of things to bring. The celebration is a full weekend, so I'm bringing options.
How fun to look back on things like this. At my wedding, I wore all black. The Husbear wore black. Nearly all of guests wore all black. I didn't even know that it was a faux pas to wear black to a wedding until so many guests were asking me if it was okay. Regarding my wedding party, I told them the dress code was, and I quote, "I don't give a heck what you wear, so long as it's all black. Wear a bathrobe for all I care. I just want you comfy, happy, and in black." 🤣
Pretty much all of my wedding attire knowledge (outside of wedding dresses themselves) comes from reddit's Am I the Asshole posts, and my fun "fact" is that apparently, if you were red (I'm assuming a bright red) to a wedding as a female presenting person, it means that you slept with the groom before. That may be more of a southern thing. No one said anything when I wore a red polka dot dress to my cousin's wedding.
I. I just. Why??? At this point I feel like there's got to be a superstition somewhere about wearing just about every color to a wedding, and none of them are "I am happy for the spouses and wish them well".
That's ridiculous and funny. Any shade of red? I just wore a burgundy dress to my cousin's wedding. He's 15 years younger than me, I was with my baby and husband of 10+ years, and I picked the dress because I could nurse in it lol
I am of the opinion that someone who gets married should just state on the invitation what they would like guests to wear. We had one rule: we want colours, no black. My Father and Brother came as complete beautiful rainbows, having purchased tie-dyed Jodhpur trousers, my brother even combining it with an Antifa bandshirt. You don't get this look at a wedding if you don't ask for it. Others wanted something more formal and I told them if they really want to wear a three piece suit in August, fine but take a nice colour. So I would advise to just ask the grooms or their best men. I was told many people these days create an email account for the wedding (or a WhatsApp group if you're willing to use that) especially for these kinds of questions. That was helpful for us. I just gave that to my best men (love him) and let him handle any questions from the guest.
The last wedding I attended was for my nephew and his husband. They got married on Halloween, and encouraged guests to come in costume. I had made a forest green 13th century kirtle and fashioned a veil out of linen leftover from making the shift. I spent all evening saying , no, I’m a medieval lady, not a nun, lol. I’ve always been curious about the custom of breaking a glass in Jewish weddings. I’m not sure if that’s a thing only in some sects or a standard thing. If you have any information on that or a reliable place to look for the answer, I’d love to know. Have fun at the wedding! It’s been my experience that queer weddings are such a fun and joyous celebration of newly gained rights. Wishing the couple all the joy and happiness!
I remember in the ‘Little House’ books that Laura close to wear a black dress for her wedding, while her mother quoted ‘married in black you’ll wish yourself back.’ This is a memory from 40+ years so I may have it a little off, but it has stuck with me all these years.
My mother-in-law wore a white linen shift dress with a floral border to my wedding. Even though I was a small wedding (35 guests), it was *very* obvious she wasn't the bride! I guess the no-white rule depends on the level of formality expected of the guests - if it's going to be very fancy, a long white dress can easily be mistaken for a wedding dress so it's best avoided. Otherwise I don't think it matters!
I think this thing of "not upstaging the bride" is a little bit nonsensical. If you're invited to a woman's wedding you should know her well enough to know whether your chosen outfit will upstage her dress, if you don't then you really have no business accepting her invitation. White is a fine color for a daytime summer party, whether or not it is a wedding. It is usually considered a faux pas to wear white in the evening, or when it is not summer (the oft cited rule in America is "after Veterans Day" which is at the beginning of September). Again, this technically applies to all parties not just weddings although weddings are typically a time when following rules of etiquette is expected. A white ball gown for a bride is an exception to the "no white in the evenings" rule, and likewise a white dress for a bride is an exception to the "white is a summer color" rule. But in summer and in the daytime, white is always an acceptable color for anyone: especially if it is not solid white. People tend to bling out their wedding attire, so I honestly would never worry about upstaging either a bride or groom. Though, if the bride is a minimalist and you're a maximalist, I'd perhaps suggest toning your typical accessorizing down a little since this is her day not yours. But this has less to do with colors and more to do with jewelry or scarves and the like, and it's about not interrupting the bride's aesthetic rather than not upstaging her. If she is someone who likes things sleek and clean, then modifying your usual dress habits in that direction for one party is a way of showing affection for her.
Yeah, I think "don't wear white" is definitely oversimplifying the spirit of the intended guideline-- "It's not your wedding, so don't make it about you".
A white wedding dress is lovely. My soft white wedding dress was going to be made of natural fabrics and in a style so it could be worn afterwards (I'm not spending that much money on a dress I wear only once) *and* it was going to be dyed a nice blue after the wedding. I also had plans to bead it so it would be "fancier" for the ceremony and I'd remove it after. Suffice it to say, I never got married (though it was close a couple times)..
I love the idea of designing a wedding dress with the intention of wearing it again! The idea of only wearing something once makes me really sad for all the work that went into the dress.
But on the question of "should you be more formal than the bride and bridegroom" I remember watching some of the TV specials in the leadup to William and Kate's wedding, and one of them followed "an ordinary wedding guest" (a shopkeeper from Kate's hometown) as he and his wife got their wedding outfits. They're ethnically Indian, so she wore a sari, but the husband went to a bespoke tailor on Saville Row to get a suit made. They talked about how William and Kate had requested the guests NOT wear morning dress (because they thought it was old-fashioned and stuffy), but the shopkeeper was going to wear a morning suit anyway. Because it's a *Royal Wedding* and that is what is *appropriate*. You can't just go to a royal wedding in a regular suit! And the tailor heartily endorsed this.
That makes perfect sense! I think one doesn't want to outdress the overall vibes of the event, but for a literal royal wedding that's pretty hard to do 🤣
If I get married again (divorced) I’m gonna wear orange blossoms in my hair… still won’t be a white dress. My first was a champagne colored ball gown. If I get married again it would be in a colorful summer dress.
i'd love victorian advice for dressing in all black whilst making it clear that you're not in even half mourning; it seems like the line between half mourning dress and dress that just happens to be black or in somber colors is nonexistent... which is not the most helpful if you find black is by far the most becoming color on you
My favorite part of Jewish weddings is that there is no "giving away the bride." The groom walks down the aisle between his parents, possibly followed by grandparents, siblings & any spouses, and ending with the bride escorted by both of her parents. The symbolism isn't a woman being passed from one man to another, but of two families joining together. Chasidic weddings muddy this up a bit by having the fathers accompany the groom and the mothers escort the bride, but that symbolism is still there.
I found an old tintype of a great+ grandparents upon their wedding. They were married at the parsonage of their minister. The bride wore "a lovely royal blue gown" made by her mother and aunt and a short veil of delicate organza. This commentary was found on the back of the photograph. The groom wore "his black wool Sunday suit." He probably was also buried in the same suit. Get this, the guests brought the food for the reception to the bride's parents. Such was life on the farm in 1855.
OMG almost wish we had such fancy events to go to where it was the norm to continue to wear your wedding clothes for the next year! I love that idea so so much ❤
As the youngest child in a large family I've been to a lot of weddings. In Australia we're pretty laid back and I've worn a little black dress with a shrug and red accessories to a Catholic mass /formal dinner wedding with no problems. Its not often we have large formal weddings which would require black or white tie, at least in my social groups. These days I wear swooshy secret pants and a nice top which is fine for most weddings. For a less formal or a garden or beach wedding your dress would be fine- even though its white its got such a big bold print no-one is going to consider it a problem.
That is what I thought. Only as I married in the hottest days of summer I decided on a not so formal comfortable summer dress. It just looks formal with the hair up and flowers and all. And now I have a summer dress.
I feel similarly! I am sure I'll end up making the dress if I get married, and I don't want to put all that work into something only to shove it in a closet after one use.
If there is no dress code on the invitation, *ask the marrying couple*! I so hate it, when I have to do the guess work about "clues" in the invitation. I went to a couple of weddings without a dresscode, so it seemed to be "wear whatever festive clothes you like". But... it really wasn't, in the end it was more like "you simply have to *know* what is appropriate", but they won't tell you... I did follow the rules you discribed "will I look like I could be mistaken for the bride in photos?" & "does this make me feel festive?" and every single outfit got me some side eyes and snide comments either by another guest, or even by the bride or the groom. As well as a ton of compliments and surprise/shock when I told other attendees about the critique. --> The first time I was wearing a long flower printed halterneck dress. The second time a salmon pink pencil skirt + a cream silk blouse. And then a turquoise knee length wrap dress. So no, I wasn't stealing anyone's show...
My great-aunt broke all the rules at her wedding. She married a divorcée who was already a grandfather, married on Friday 13th and wore green. This was around 40s or 50s. Local snobs said they were never going to work but she showed them and they were happily married their whole lives. She also was the youngest sister and became a grandmother first upon her wedding. My dad tells me she had bragging rights for years lol
I find it interesting the different expectations people have in different places for weddings and funerals. Where I live in Australia, a white patterned dress wouldn't be remarked on and I don't think a plain white one would be either unless it was very fancy because the difference in style between a wedding dress and an ordinary dress is quite extreme. It would be an unusual choice though. Most people wear dark colours with black being a favourite.
I would add that white - being harder and more expensive to maintain in clean condition, would have been more easily available to the upper classes. Therefore, though I don't think I have heard anyone say it; I do believe that a white gown in general would not have been popular with the lower classes, as they would not likely have had the time and money for proper care of a white gown to be worn several times, needing to be cleaned between uses. Victorian and pre-Victorian wedding dresses were many different colors. My great grandmother's (in the late 1800's) was a grey-ish steel blue. I have seen pictures of brides in blues, pinks, and even reds for their wedding day. The color of the dress was far less important than the flowers. Also, there is is symbolism assigned to the other dress colors as well.
Oh definitely! People on a budget were much less likely to go for a new white gown, and a lot more likely to have a new "best" dress in a fabric they could easily reuse. Or, wear whatever their "best" dress was if they couldn't afford a new one.
I went with an off-white dress with red trim that had Ren faire vibes for my own wedding--a family friend is a costumer and she made the dress out of my mom's wedding dress (which was very 80s with the big puffy sleeves). I've worn black dresses to weddings before, as well as red, brown, green, and blue. I think the last wedding I was at, I wore a red sleeveless dress over a natural linen shirt and black leggings since it was a casual wedding and we were up in the mountains and it was chilly.
I seriously do not care what people wear to a wedding. In fact, when I got married, I told my bridesmaids what the wedding colors were and let them choose. I was in a cream-colored dress...they all showed up in the same shade independently. It was lovely. Most of this is manufactured anger to give people something to be angry about, like socks and sandals. People LOVE rage bait regardless of why they are angry.
I am from the north-west of Germany and here around the year 1900 women usually wore a black dress and a white veil for their wedding. I have seen many photos but don't know any particulars.
In the 1500s in Sweden there were a tradition of bestmens (brudsvennar). They were to protect the couple to and from the church. 😁They could also help to kidnap the bride if her family didn't wish for the marriage.😅
I believe the best man in other areas had similar duties-- and in the 19th century this evolved into making sure the groom showed up, was not drunk, et c.
As for curiosities aboutother Victorian fashion, I think maybe you have videos on all of them? Mourning attire, duration. Accessories & other protocols Esp. Black new or dyed Was (lack ofl comfort a part of mourning Hair jewelry Other memorial practices related to fashion, or fashion-tangential Common/lower class fancier clothes/fashion advice for "dressing up" when no nice clothes are available Costumes & accessories worn to costume balls
When I was a child I went to a 19th century house that had been turned into a museum in a place called Tailem Bend in South Australia. The exhibits included the wedding dress that the wife had worn. It was black. I wouldn't absolutely swear to it but I think I also saw black wedding dresses in similar museums in the Barossa Valley, which was settled by Lutheran Prussians.
I really hope the hype around the white wedding dress will cease. White simply does not suit everyone, let alone in form of a flouncing cupcake. Let brides wear what they want, not what is „social norm“!
@@dressdeveloper I wore a bright orange/gold taffeta skirt with a black corset decorated with Chinese dragons in gold. I don't like white so I was all for drama
In my part of the world (sweden) brides of the lower classes (my reference is a lot of family photos thanks to my mothers geneology research) often wore black long into the 20ths century. The reason is money issues. ...people just couldn't afford more than one lavish dress and it needed to be used in burials and fancy parties to. Black was the go to "dressed up" colour.
I know in the 16th and 17th centuries, true black was an expensive color to dye so it was considered extra fancy. I wonder if that stuck around longer there than in other regions?
I wore brown to my cousin's midday spring/summer black and white themed wedding because EVERYONE I asked said wearing black was bad luck. I stuck out like a sore thumb in the pictures.
I wore a white dress to another person's wedding once, because I was unaware of the idea it was a faux-pas and it was the best dress I owned. I actually first learned the idea you're not supposed to do that AT that wedding, when this 12-14 year old girl came up to me to snidely tell me so. After having watched this video, though, I can safely say that my dress was perfectly acceptable to wear, since nobody could've mistaken me for the bride, considering I was ten years old at the time. Regarding white wedding dresses being conspicuous consumption, I've also seen the idea bandied about that they could dye the dress a different colour after the wedding, therefore letting you reuse the very nice dress even outside of the context of a wedding. I'm not sure how actually historical this idea is, though, so it might just be someone speculation.
My family is from Norway, and the 19th Century was the rise of the folk costume as A Thing Of National Pride in Scandinavia. Many of those folk costumes are black (or other dark color) with embroidery. All are based on late-18th Century clothes with small regional variations. I would bet a great deal that that's what was going on.
Some (especially those developed later) are based on early to mid-19th century clothes as well, but you’re right about the colours: black, blue and red are the most common main colours, with green not too far behind. The general trend is that the wool is dyed a “rich” colour (black is always deep black and not charcoal, for example) and the shirt is bleached linen, usually with whitework embroidery. If the bodice is silk, it may also be a different colour such as gold, which is less commonly used for wool.
Sweden does indeed have a tradition of black wedding dresses. It was mostly worn by lower income brides, who weren't going to waste money on a dress you would only wear once! A black wool dress with long sleeves and a high neck would be respectable in any social situation and could thus be used over and over. When used as a wedding dress it would be combined with a white veil and other white accessories, as well as a bouquet and maybe a small crown. (source: a book by swedish artist and dress historian Tonie Lewenhaupt that would translate to "Black as-" but I don't think it's been translated to other languages). I briefly considered wearing a black wedding dress since I am a goth at heart, but eventually made a green outfit with gold details. Anything but the usual white dress that I would absolutely get dirty in an instant! My white hooped petticoat had so much mud on it, thank god it was 100% cotton bedsheets and curtains (I made the entire outfit machine washable because I am very clumsy). 😅
In the picture taken of my grandparents at their wedding in 1909, my grandmother and her attendant are both wearing what look like Edwardian white dresses. It was a Lutheran wedding. Both my grandparents were first generation Americans from Sweden.
I've read some comments. Don't know if anybody answered the question. I liked the way U answered questions using Victorian quotes :). Would like to see more:) very interesting, great vlog thx. Ciao
The only kind of black I could think of in Scandinavia (And technically parts of the south-eastern German speaking world) is in the fact that a bunad or dirndl at its most formal usually has a lot of black in it. Getting black wool and silk to be black and stay black on a garment you were expected to buy once and wear for every formal occasion for the rest of your life is as much conspicuous consumption as having white silk stay white is. It also makes traditional silver jewelry and decorative colors on aprons, bodices, shirts or just sewn-on ribbons pop, and drives home the fact that they need to be removed to be cleaned (or dry cleaned in modern times). You technically get your "adult" bunad at your Confirmation, and your first silver is part of the gifts for it, with additional silver being gifted for other milestones that come after, but there are elements to a bunad (and some German tracht) that are worn only during a wedding ceremony or after one is married. I'm speaking in the present tense because I've got Norwegian friends who still hand embroider cuffs and collars for their bunad shirt (cheaper than having an artisan do it) with traditionally dyed black thread (lest the bunad police get you) with the assumption that you are not washing those in the same load as the crisp white linen shirt that is your base layer. For dirndl, there is the book "Alte Volkskunst: Trachten aus und rund um Wien" from 1985 where the authors (claim to) have looked at extant garments and still insist that, if you make a high dress dirndl, you can't go wrong with black, better include some black unless you live in a hyper-specific region, and that black better be ankle length and silk, or very high quality wool, and include absolutely zero cotton in any part of your ensemble. Cotton is reserved for everyday or workwear dirndls you can just throw in a washing machine without unpicking or removing anything, which readers are informed of in the same tone that the internet discusses socks in sandals. (Turns out there's a dirndl police, and they're very salty that no one is listening.) Obligatory disclaimer: I got married in a knee length neon green and bright pink cotton dirndl, because that was the budget friendly option and it was the easiest way to not wear white without getting commented on. I believe immigrants can wear the dress of the region they are in if they so choose, or wear their own cultural dress for festive occasions, and wave whatever flag they want doing it. I think any gender can wear whatever traditional dress suits them best for any occasion. And just for good measure: the bunad police need to realize that there is a difference between preserving one's culture and history and harassing people in the street over their clothes.
A lot of the “rules” for bunad-wearing (which can vary depending on which bunad you have) started out as advice on what tends to look good and what’s practical if you’re dancing. I break the “rules” for how to wear my bunad every time I wear it because there’s not enough space to place both brooches on the shirtwaist above the wool bodice, so my smaller brooch is pinned to wool rather than linen. And I don’t wear my shawl unless I want the extra layer, because I don’t want to cover up the lovely embroidery on the back of the bodice.
Black is a bad colour for men's suits. Navy or dark grey is a much better choice for your first suit. If you want to wear your suit to a funeral, pair your navy or dark grey suit with a black tie. To a wedding wear a bright and joyous tie.
@@sarahr8311 more versatile - suitable for the office and weddings with a change of tie. A black suit is also more difficult to wear - looks very austere, drains the complexion, and shows lint/dandruff etc
I ran into all these weird ettiquette issues when I got married (30 yrs ago sigh) It was pretty low key but kind of fantasy based & I wore a $50 off white empire maxi dress with gold trim detailing & gold threading throughout. I liked the vintage vibe of it. Technically our colors were creme/off white, gold with teal & wine accent colors (which were in a paisley pattern vest & duster the MOD & BestMan & ring bearers wore) We both wore off white & gold. The older ladies in my family kept asking if it was ok if they wore x color. I was kind of pre occupied with school & fighting with my mother over the wedding while trying to secure a venue & figure out guest lists, food, music, etc. My reaction was IDGAF what you wear, wear what you want you aren't in the wedding party. My mom informed me that it was tradional to NOT wear the colors of the wedding party so no one would be confused? Idk, it was a summer wedding (Aug) & hot af, if people wanted to wear off white I didn't think anyone would confuse them with me the bride considering the fantasy costuming. We also stipulated NO GIFTs but got a bunch of glassware & a punch bowl we really didn't have room for in our apartment anyway lol.
my brother recently got married, they opted for a very small 'elopement' with 15 guests including their standing friends and their 3 children. It was beautiful, I did ask if they had any preferances with how people dressed and all I got was blacks fine, nothing bright. I'm know for wearing bright red so that was fair
Fun Random fact: when the Daughters of the American Revolution have their state and national meetings, the "pages" (younger women who are boots on the ground running the conference) wear white to both blend into the background but also be easy to find when you need help. Since the dress code for evening is formal you have a bunch of ladies in wedding dresses. For the national meeting there are around 300!
It's funny because in Switzerland people generally wear white to a wedding. It's also quite hard to upstage a bride as they usually wear long dresses/ballgowns/fancy dresses. I never understood the fuss about the "don't wear white to a wedding" rule ^^'
My SIL wore a silver dress at her wedding and she looked gorgeous. I think it's okay if you have some white, like a dress with a white sash or with a print that includes white. You're very clearly not the bride if it's a traditional Western wedding. But any bride who truly cares about being the only one with any kind of white should include that on the invite as part of the dress code.
Very infirmative, thank you. What about the topic of gender bias clothing, i.e. an event where the wearer is attired in clothing suppossedly for the opposite gender or has aspects of clothing for the opposite gender. Such as a wedding where the men attending wish to wear dresses and the women wearing suits. Or any other formal event that requires the guests to be fittingly attired. Hope that makes sence.
I don't tend to mess with gender much in my personal fashion, so I'm unsure if I'm the person to make that video-- but I did have a great time doing a video about the history of skirts as menswear back in April!
People tend to overthink what to wear to wedding because they get caught up in the significance of the event. But youre a guest so its really not that deep. Just dress like you're going to a nice dinner with your parents in any color other than white. Its a long day so comfortable dress shoes are a must.
Not sure how it is in the rest of the world but in Brazil, at least for the past 30 years or so, black is seen as a great color for a femme guest to wear (but never a bridesmaid or the mothers of the couple unless it's requested), especially if it's not a cerimony held during the day and/or at the beach, garden etc A black dress is seen as elegant and not too showy, and impossible to be confused with a bridesmaid, bride or bridal party, so it's seen as perfect for a femme guest. I think it became recommended as the tradition of black as mourning clothes waned and as the ''little black dress'' rose as the symbol of ideal formalwear for almost any occasion.
Now I feel less weird about only having been to 3 weddings in my 20+ years of adulthood. My mom and step-dad got married in the early 1990's, her first marriage, his second. They eloped to Reno and her dress was purple. My sister got married in 2012 and I'm embarrassed to say I can't remember her dress at all, but I do remember her accent color was blue.
I'm also going to my first wedding (for my cousin) in a few weeks. i have my outfit figured out (sans finalizing accessories), but the whole social etiquette has been stressful for my autistic ass lol. my wedding will 100% not be like this i will be telling everyone to dress like it's a ren faire
Yeah the social etiquette does seem a bit needlessly complicated. I'm happy that my friends' wedding is gonna be pretty different than the "standard", and I think will be a better time for everyone because of it.
“Because humans are like this” an underused reason when it so often applies
👆👆👆
Fun fact: white has been traditional for Jewish weddings (particularly Ashkenazi) longer than for xtian weddings. But in Jewish weddings white doesn't have the creepy misogynist "I have an intact hymen" symbolism. Both the bride and groom wore white for the same reason we frequently wear white for Yom Kippur: to symbolize a blank sheet of parchment with all of our recorded sins erased. A couple's wedding day is supposed to be their own personal Yom Kippur, and Orthodox couples will still fast until after the ceremony, so that they go into their new life together with a blank slate, or blank parchment, with all of their sins from their individual lives erased.
See I like this tradition so much better! . . . but I'm still not wearing white if I ever get married, I will look like a corpse. And cool as the Jewish corpse bride folk tale is, it's not my vibe 🤣
Definitely a vast improvement over the christian one.
I read a post apocalyptic story once (*maybe* by Joan Aiken??? ) where brides wore yellow to symbolise the wish for some sunshine in their future (so much pollution meant sunny days were rare in this story).
@@SnappyDragon you would, however, look stunning in ivory. (My mother got married again at the age of 75. She wore a white cocktail dress and a hat with a veil, and looked appropriate and lovely. My brother and I walked her down.)
@@JenInOz Yellow?!??! Great, so in this future I would look like I have jaundice on my wedding day.
In Korea, it was traditional to wear red at the wedding. Those dresses were *heavily* embroidered so there was no way you could upstage a bride
Fun fact: those particular dresses were only reserved for royalty, but peasant girls were allowed to wear them on their wedding day so they can be a princess for a day. There was a dedicated place where those wedding clothes were kept and you could go borrow them for your wedding ceremony
I like the idea of them being communal like that!
That sounds lovely. In Sweden we usually had a bridal crown in silver (in the parish church) that a woman could borrow for her wedding. That's still possible to do in many places.
I went to a wedding about 15 years ago, and the redheaded bride wore a champagne silk satin dress: It was an absolutely exquisite combination 🤗
That sounds lovely!
Scandinavian folk clothes including bridalwear usually have a lot of black in them. My folkdräkt has a black wool skirt and a red bodice and the apron and all the accessories have a bunch of different colours. The costumes are usually mostly black and red and the embroidery and jewellery and details are very colourful.
And although my bunad is green (like the cap the embroidery was based on), the cut of it is based on a circa 1850 wedding dress which was black.
This is so interesting! My great grandmother moved to the US from Finland at around age 20, and married here in the 1920s in a black dress with handkerchief hem. I always heard it was so that she could continue to wear it to church and funerals, but it's neat to hear that also fit with her cultural background! (I got to see the dress when my aunt wore it for her wedding ~2000. She changed into a short red dress for the reception.)
Video idea: how to dress for first impressions: job interviews, meeting your partner’s parents, etc.
First time I met my husbands family they gave my 6 year old son strawberries, so they won't remember anything else but the sight of his allergic reaction 😅, we didn't know he was allergic, so it was memorable but not in a good way. ❤
Oh wow, that sounds so scary! He’s ok now, right?
I remember hearing that, although blue had been used as a symbol of purity in earlier times, Victoria decided against it as blue (as a symbol of purity) was the colour most commonly associated with pictures of the Virgin Mary, and she didn’t want to be seen as a Catholic sympathiser. Red (the colour of life and fertility) had also often been worn at wedding, but Victoria had worn red for her coronation, and wanted her wedding to be seen as a union between man and wife, not Queen and subject. She chose white because it held no symbolism at all, so couldn’t be misconstrued. After the royal wedding, all the brides wanted to wear white because that was what the Queen had worn.
She was definitely making a really strong statement about the nature of her marriage!
I think that one of the reasons for weddings being fancy could be that marriage was a huge deal, a change of life, a relationship that was meant to be for the rest of their lives. Even a change in dress, the way the women wore their hair and how they covered their hair could change. In Sweden similar things also happened after the adolescents confirmation in church, where the young girls started to wear their hair up afterwards
As a former wedding photographer, my advice is to follow the cues of your invitation (the printing, any instructions, the type of venue), what folks involved in the wedding are saying about how the wedding party is approaching the wedding (my/our big day or joy-centered celebration), and just don't overdo it. Also, wear shoes that you can be in for the whole day and reception or have a change of shoes in the car for between the wedding and reception. Simple flats or sandals are fine if heels do not love your feet!
Thankfully I know the couple getting married quite well-- they're basically planning a weekend of folk-dancing, so I'll pack three or four dance dresses and some comfy clothes for mornings. And dance shoes, of course!
@@SnappyDragonsounds like it is going to be a marvelous wedding.
This is right on target.
In addition to Asian weddings usually being red, the traditional color in Sudan is red and I have some evidence that red was the traditional Egyptian color too. Additionally, both 19th century Egypt and current Sudan had traditional bridal shawls imported from India! The Sudanese one is a plsid with gold, red, blue, and other colors, called a Garmasis, and the Egyptian one was a red Kashmir shawl draped to hide the bride from view, with a few pieces of jewelry attached on the outside.
In Morroco, the traditional dress was called "the Great dress", and was made of red velvet with gold embroidery.
Fun fact for you…Mary Queen of Scots wore a white wedding dress for her wedding day to the Dauphin of France. It was said to be richly made the color of ivory with orange blossoms and Lilies, can’t remember which kind, embroidered on it. People who witnessed were said to be shocked and were in awe of her choice of color. I don’t know why I know this, just a random tidbit of trivia. Have fun at the wedding whatever you wear, I dig purple, it’s my jam. Cheers❤
Oooh I'll have to look into this!
If I remember correctly that far back in history it was either white or yellow was actually a mourning color in france. But I may be remembering wrong.
@@rebeccawayman4219 Mary Queen of Scotts wore a lot of white, anyway. She had red gold hair and white was very flattering, becoming “her color.”
@@nancyjohnson7147 nope,,, you are correct. That’s why many were shocked.
@@SnappyDragon it will be another fun rabbit hole indeed. What a neat tidbit of history though.
For what it's worth, a close friend of mine has said for years that she's going to show up to my wedding in cosplay. I told her to go for it.
I love a costume wedding! Lots of the Victorian sources talked about themed historical outfits for the bridal party.
I think I remember reading/hearing from an older relative, that lower-income brides would dye the white dress and put it into regular usage after.
@@sisuka6505 my granny got married in 1939, and did exactly that. She was thrifty, not poor. And with rationing later on, it was totally necessary
Late 60s and my best friend who got married thought about that but she could only afford a polyester one that one couldn't dye. I had the usual hot pink frou frou dress that no one would ever wear in public again.
One of the things I read (not 19thC, later) mentioned that white wedding dresses truly became ubiquitous in the 30s-40s because of the availability of cheaper rayon and synthetic materials for them.
Hippies did too in the 1970s - my mum wore a white cotton dress that she later dyed pink
@@SnappyDragon My parents got married in December 1951 and they both purchased new suits for the occasion. Mom’s was black. They were both in their 30s at the time and it was their first and only marriage.
In Japanese traditional weddings, the bride changed several times - she would arrive and be welcomed in a formal furisode, the garment of unmarried women, adorned with the crest of her maiden family. She'd then change into a Shirokakeshita, a white kimono and accessories, to drink the nuptial wine - there is a bit of debate about the symbolism of the white, some say it's for purity, some say it's to show the transition from her old 'colours' to her new family's 'colours', some say it's to mourn her childhood/life with her parents. (I see the purity meaning a lot more in newer sources and have my suspicions that it's mostly seeped over from Western exposure.) Depending on the culture and religion being observed, she may also wear either a fancy red and gold Uchikake over-robe for good fortune, or a white one. After the main ceremony, she'd then change again into a new adult woman's formal kimono, normally a Tomesode with her new family's crest on it, and be introduced to the new relations and friends of the groom's family as a married woman while wearing this kimono.
There are of course lots of variations, and during the Edo period the bright might have changed at least her accessories and outer layers 5+ times! Nowdays the bridal outfits can be anywhere from full ultra-traditional Shinto with multiple changes to a completely modern/western gown, and there are so many fun and interesting hybrid styles and variations that people create in the space in between.
I've seen a few pictures of wedding kimono and they're gorgeous!
Back when I was planning my own wedding, I remember reading somewhere that BLUE was originally the color associated with purity, because of its association with the Virgin Mary. I thought about having a blue wedding dress since I look good in blue, but ended up loving a beautiful ivory peau de soie gown. Maybe for our tenth anniversary next year we'll do a vow renewal and I'll wear blue!
My grandma wore blue for her wedding. It was a shocking choice for her because she's mennonite, and up until those days (the 50s) women only got married in black. But my grandma refused to get married in a mourning dress.
My mom heard the same thing, and opted to wear a denim dress, and the dress code for everyone else was blue jeans... 😂
I had a baby blue wedding dress, and loved having something with color. White/ivory dresses are fine, but I wanted something a little more colorful.
That's fascinating about blue wedding dresses. My grandma's wedding dress was light blue (1936). I had always assumed that since it was during the depression that she couldn't afford to buy a fancy white dress, and instead wore her best dress.
We had a hike-in wedding and now I never want to attend another fancy dress wedding again. No pomp, just comfy clothes, good times with friends, and all the dogs and kids. 12/10, would recommend 😄
I do really love "unconventional" weddings like that. I'd much rather go to a ceremony and party that reflects who the spouses are and what matters to them, than something they're "supposed" to do.
My husband has a book with photos of his ancestors from about 1890 when they came over from Norway and settled in the American Midwest. As the men got married, each of their brides wore the exact same purple gown initially belonging to the husbands' sister (photos are sepia, but a family member kept a journal) that was temporarily altered for her.
So there's a decade's worth of photos from 8 different weddings where there's different couples, same dress.
Oh wow! I do like the idea of having something shared or communal like that.
Bridal costumes in European folk costume can get pretty wild. I went to a folk costume museum in Serbia last year and some of the bridal outfits were covered in coins or involved insanely elaborate headdresses.
I always love seeing these! It really goes to show just how limited our idea of "Western" or "European" fashion is, that so many regional styles got overwritten by English/French fashions.
I've been to a *LOT* of family weddings, christnings and funerals. I wear what I want (though I've never worn white except as a shirt/blouse). My family members have come to formal ceremonies wearing everything from suits and full formal gowns to tracksuits in bright pink (yes, I've seen that at a funeral). Aside from the variations of traditional wedding dresses, there have been brides dressed in pastel "office suits" (one in slacks) with a lacy or floral-topped facinator. One cousin and her bridesmaids wore camo and jeans. Most of my cousins don't care what you wear, they're just happy you showed up. Re: Black at a wedding. I've worn a black dress to a wedding (floral fabric). I went with my Grandmother and Aunt to pick a dress out, and I came out of the dressing room and they both said "That's lovely, you look charming."- and my Aunt was a stickler for proper etiquette.
It sounds absolutely ideal to have a family that prioritizes what matters 💚
To preface: I really love my mother in law even though she can sometimes be a lot, especially when she’s excited about something. So when I was planning my wedding I remember her being almost horrified that my mother was planning to wear a black dress. I couldn’t have cared less, especially since the dress suited my mom’s typical style. And I wanted her to feel comfortable in what she wore.
The funniest part about it to me was that my mother in law wore this dark navy dress that I would have mistaken for black if she hadn’t had that reaction to my mother’s dress color.
Ahahahaha. This is why we really need to stop making assumptions like this about what color people are wearing. If I want to ill-wish someone's wedding, I wouldn't wear black, I'd go full Maleficent and show up with a dragon or something 🤣
Do you own a time machine?
If yes you are invited to my wedding. I am going to have insulted you shortly before the wedding.
That would be cool.
Of course you know better, but I could imagine that she chose such a dark color so she would blend in with your mom’s choice. I know my mother in law thought it important to coordinate with my mom.
My Dutch grandmother wore a dark silk dress for her wedding in the early 1920s. Many European Catholic traditions had the bride wear a new dark dress to indicate her new status, with a change of headdress style to further reinforce the message.
My Dutch grandmother married in black, because she was in mourning over her father's death. The wedding had to happen soon though, can't have the farm be without a man on it
I once wore a lovely warm-red dress, as in, not siren red but slightly darker (but not burgundy) and then the bride turned up and was wearing the exact same shade of red - LOL!!
Never knew about the orange blossoms, btw. I know I saw them mentioned in books etc. but didn't realise how significant they were for brides.
Oof, yes! I feel like this is why if one cares about people not matching the spouses, they ought to say so on the invitations or otherwise make it very clear.
I have nothing to contribute to this conversation but I shall comment to feed the algorithmic machine. All hail the algorithm.
My paternal grandmother wore a purple dress to her wedding. Family lore is divided on her reasoning when white was the standard by then (maternal gran wore white), with some thinking it was a Sunday Best situation, others thinking it had to do with some patriarchy-induced shame about bad things that happened to her as a very young child. My hope is that it was an intentional choice to spite her uptight family.
I hope so too! I think everyone should be able to get married in the color that makes them feel most celebratory.
My grandmother and her sister both got married in 1930, a few months apart, and went in very different directions. Aunt Julia’s dress was a beautifully elaborate white confection with a fabulous beaded cloche hat and veil. Gram’s dress was a very pretty but practical brown velvet that was her ‘fancy’ dress for years afterward. These were not wealthy people, farming/mill working family in upstate New York. I think it was just a question of personalities and priorities. Julia wanted fancy, and she got it. It really was a great dress! Gram splashed out in other ways but was always practical and not super concerned about clothes.
On an amusing note, their father brought out his dandelion wine for Gram’s October wedding, but not for Julia’s in July. Whether he didn’t like Julia’s husband as much or the wine just wasn’t ready at the time, I have no idea, but Gram said her wedding was quite the party!
I have a fashion plate, from 1869. The bride is wearing a blue underskirt and a lot of froof in white. It's quite low cut, like a ballgown. The bridesmaid (aged about 7) is wearing a white petticoat with a pink jacket, and what looks like the matron of honour (I am guessing it's the bride's married sister) is wearing a very stylish light brown silk.
PS green is deemed to be bad luck because it's the colour of The Good Ones, and you might have them steal the bride
That sounds like a lovely plate! Do you know where the superstition about green being the color of the Fair Folk comes from? I've read that in some places it was one of the many preferred colors for brides, because it symbolized fertility and new beginnings.
@@SnappyDragon not really, it's just something I grew up with. It could just be my family, most of whom are of Scottish, Irish, and Scandinavian descent. But They are renowned for living in green mounds and the two strange children of Woolpit had green skin. Until they had spent enough time away from their home.
Yes, we scandinavians did wear black wedding dresses!! I haven't read too much on the topic, but it's still a tradition in some southern regions where traditional dress still lingers as festive wear.
Oh good I'm glad I wasn't misinformed!
Excellent of you to mention multiple cultures ❤
The only thing I know about weddings is something I read in Emily Post from last century, A new bride wears white, if she gets married again she wears Ivory and a third time Turquoise. She doesn't say what comes next. I guess, Honey three times, just give up.
Oh goodness, that's very specific!
Ooooh! That’s so intriguing! I have a cream dress I married my husband in and then for our tenth anniversary I altered the dress so I could wear it again (weight gain from 21-31 is completely normal but the dress had a zipper and was brocade, so no stretching capability), but I’m planning a vow renewal for the 20 year mark and I’m planning on wearing garb and so is he. My current best warm weather dress is turquoise! So now I just need to finish the embellishment on it and then I’ll be fine if the weather is warm enough
A few years ago, we were invited to a steampunk festival and to attend a friend's Wiccan handfasting that was being held as part of the festival programme. I made myself and hubby lovely steampunk outfits for the occasion. When we got there we were invited to be part of the bridal party which was lovely except that everyone else in the party was wearing "elven " style dresses so we stood out in our steam punk clothes.
My mother's father passed away suddenly, shortly before her wedding. She didn't feel like wearing a traditional wedding dress, so she wore a light grey suit. She looked lovely.
I only recall attending one Jewish wedding. The couple was late because they had to find a minyan en route to the site. The ceremony took place outdoors, in the summer, with little to no shade. The ceremony itself and lunch afterwards was more about impressing the in-laws than anything else. I guess the in-laws were fans of brief ceremonies and bland food.
From what I gather, most Jewish weddings are better planned and more celebratory.
I think weddings in any culture can be a good or bad time depending on the individuals planning them
I'm not Jewish, so I had to look up what a minyan was. Thanks, I learned a new thing today, and it's only 8:47 in the morning.
Some years back (the 1980s) my immediate supervisor -- and friend -- was criticized for an outfit choice to wear to a wedding by her sister because it was white. I saw it and it was not entirely white, but blue and white striped! Needless to say, I was appalled by her sister's criticism especially when her sister was going to wear black lace!
P.S.: Fast forward 40 years later -- I think that the black and white dress you pulled out is charming!
Yeah that seems just incredibly unnecessary!
ngl I was a little relieved when my friends' wedding was postponed due to covid (they still got married but just went to the courthouse alone), because it's given me more time to think about what I want to wear as a nonbinary person in the wedding party.
I've seen some incredibly cool outfits, both on guests and on nonbinary folk who are marrying!
That can be a hard question. What did you go for? (If you are willing to share?)
@@danielalaatz57 it actually still hasn't happened yet lol. the original plan of pushing it back 1 year did work for international wedding party members reasons, so they decided to wait until their 5th or 7th anniversary to celebrate. which means I still haven't decided on what I'm wearing
@@nyves104 I hope you find something you feel good in.
Actually, as we got married during Covid restrictions with a very small party, we were thinking about having a nice big party for our 5th anniversary. If you have any input I would live Ideas for inclusive dresscode. Although I think everyone who knows us will just wear what they feel comfortable in anyhow.
I think the white dress she held up gets even more of a free pass because most women get married in floor length dresses made of nonpatterned fabric. But also it's a gay wedding so who cares? It looks cute!
Oh yeah, I would have no concern for that dress being mistaken for a bridal dress-- it's part of why I used it as an example of how ridiculous this standard can be!
It is very interesting that so much of what we think of as a wedding in the West is so recent.
This seems to be the case with a lot of supposedly super-old institutions!
A lot of the instances I have come across regarding colors that shouldn't be worn, are rules for A holes who are going to show up in white to try and upstage the bride, or black funeral attire to show they are morning the marriage. A case of crazy is going to crazy but at least every else can know they are crazy.
Yeah, it seems like attaching these meanings just gives people a way to either pick at others, or express the sort of self-centered behavior that they'd find a way to do so anyways. If you're that upset at a wedding happening . . . maybe don't go?
If I remember correctly, the bodice that the cut of the nordlandsbunad (from Vefsn, roughly in the middle of Norway) is modelled after was/is black, and that was originally the bodice of a wedding dress.
As for what uniquely differentiated the bride, it was her headwear: she might wear a wreath of myrtle flowers, or even a crown.
It makes a lot of sense to have the bride identified by a headdress rather than specific type of dress! Much less resource-intensive to make a headdress than an entire outfit only for getting married in.
@@SnappyDragon
And the wreath was fresh flowers of the season allowed it, while the crown would obviously be reused by future brides.
@@SnappyDragon There were women who were "bride dressers" and they would lend the crown, and sometimes also the dress, to the bride. The crowns I've seen are very large and colorful, with pieces of colored paper dangling from the top.
My Finnish maternal grandmother wore all black to her rural wedding in the late 1930s. She was born in 1917 in a part of Karelia that became a part of Russia after WW2.
On the other hand, my Swedo-Finnish paternal grandmother wore all white to her wedding, in the mid-1930s. She was born in 1907 in Helsinki, our capitol, where she also got married.
My Dutch grandmother married in black, because she was in mourning over her father's death. The wedding had to happen soon, because there just had to be a man on the farm..
I found it really interesting that none of these books had much to say about if the bride was in mourning! It had to have been something that happened, but I didn't see any specific suggestions for it.
My maternal granny was born in Helsinki in 1907, and wore her best outfit when she married my grandfather in 1940. They were both working class, and didn't have the money for fancy wedding clothes.
My paternal granny also wore her best outfit for her wedding in 1946, because working class and post war rationing.
When we were planning our wedding (lo these many years ago) I was horrified when the guy from the shul suggested using a light bulb instead of a wine glass for my new husband to crush "because it makes a louder noise." The reason for the wine glass (as far as i can tell) is because it's a symbol of celebration and we are reminding ourselves that until the Holy Temple is rebuilt all are celebrations are tempered by the remembrance of the destroyed Holy Temple.
The only things I know for sure about dressing for a wedding is that white is for the bride only, red means you either have slept with, tried to, or are currently trying to sleep with the groom, and black is for funerals only (especially in more conservative Catholic families). I also read somewhere once that if a woman shows up in white, the bridesmaids are required to pour red wine on the dress, but I cannot find a source for that, so grains of salt and all that. I think the coolest little thing I found planning my own wedding is that for most Spanish-speaking countries it's more common for brides to have fans as opposed to bouquets, and as a Mexican fan enthusiast I am absolutely using this as an excuse to shop for new fans both for myself and my party. In addition, one thing we're doing to incorporate my fiance's Italian heritage, I'm letting him pick out my fan as traditionally, the groom will present the bride with a bouquet before they walk down the aisle together. I'm also opting for a more traditional mantilla style veil, as it seems to me the most versatile option as both a cultural and dressier piece of outerwear, and a small antique silver peineta from the region in Mexico part of my family is from instead of the "western" tiara. Doing the research into customs from our cultures, it's interesting to see what's been around since Roman/precolonial times, what was brought in by the church, and what was brought into vogue by Queen Victoria, but for me at least, it's about us declaring to the world that we choose each other and celebrating afterwards, so the artistic things we chose to keep and get rid of are really about who we are and where we came from more than any other significance.
In Bengali culture, brides wear red, so as a wedding guest, I won't wear red or anything that could be close to it. The only exception was when I attended a wedding during lockdown through a video call, and the bride was wearing pink, so my orange shalwar kameez (that can look red at certain angles) didn't seem like I was upstaging the bride.
"Some people have nothing better to do than be judgemental" When I got married, we both wore black. And we asked our guests to wear black and shades of purple. (With the exception of my grandma who felt uncomfortable in black, so we agreed another colour was just fine.) Some complete stranger decided to berate my brand new sisters in law for wearing black, because "you can't wear the same colour as the bride!". Yep, some people clearly have nothing better to do.
Whatever you wear, I hope you have fun at the wedding and that your friends have a beautiful life together. Great video as always!
I just. Imagine the audacity of berating the spouses' siblings for following the requested dress code???
In Norway, bridesmaids tend to be little girls, so them matching the bride is hardly going to cause any confusion. Besides, the bride is usually the only one with flowers in her hair (a veil, although traditional since pre-Christian times, is definitely optional nowadays, and even if one is worn it usually doesn’t cover the face).
@@SnappyDragon I know. I almost wish I had that kind of confidence.
Both grooms? Nice. As a fellow redhead, I would say a nice dark color like a dark blue or purple. Because light colors seem to wash us out. But if you are one of the rare redheads who can pull off pink? Go for pink!
I second dark blue, that tends to go well with red hair. Or green, although that might give wood elf/Merida vibes (which isn't necessarily a bad thing). Depending on how close one is with the soon-to-be-wedded, the easiest way is to send them a picture of what you want to wear and ask if thats ok with them. Problem solved🥳
Ooooh I do have a pink dress that would work really well, from the Ora Lin Robin blouse pattern! I'll add that to the list of things to bring. The celebration is a full weekend, so I'm bringing options.
If I was redhead I would choose green or blue for contrasting colour. I love contrast!
How fun to look back on things like this. At my wedding, I wore all black. The Husbear wore black. Nearly all of guests wore all black. I didn't even know that it was a faux pas to wear black to a wedding until so many guests were asking me if it was okay. Regarding my wedding party, I told them the dress code was, and I quote, "I don't give a heck what you wear, so long as it's all black. Wear a bathrobe for all I care. I just want you comfy, happy, and in black." 🤣
I certainly hope no one had the audacity to talk about how one shouldn't wear blac at a wedding to you!
Pretty much all of my wedding attire knowledge (outside of wedding dresses themselves) comes from reddit's Am I the Asshole posts, and my fun "fact" is that apparently, if you were red (I'm assuming a bright red) to a wedding as a female presenting person, it means that you slept with the groom before. That may be more of a southern thing. No one said anything when I wore a red polka dot dress to my cousin's wedding.
I. I just. Why??? At this point I feel like there's got to be a superstition somewhere about wearing just about every color to a wedding, and none of them are "I am happy for the spouses and wish them well".
That's ridiculous and funny. Any shade of red? I just wore a burgundy dress to my cousin's wedding. He's 15 years younger than me, I was with my baby and husband of 10+ years, and I picked the dress because I could nurse in it lol
I am of the opinion that someone who gets married should just state on the invitation what they would like guests to wear. We had one rule: we want colours, no black.
My Father and Brother came as complete beautiful rainbows, having purchased tie-dyed Jodhpur trousers, my brother even combining it with an Antifa bandshirt. You don't get this look at a wedding if you don't ask for it.
Others wanted something more formal and I told them if they really want to wear a three piece suit in August, fine but take a nice colour.
So I would advise to just ask the grooms or their best men. I was told many people these days create an email account for the wedding (or a WhatsApp group if you're willing to use that) especially for these kinds of questions. That was helpful for us. I just gave that to my best men (love him) and let him handle any questions from the guest.
Yeah, saying so on the invitations just seems sensible.
The last wedding I attended was for my nephew and his husband. They got married on Halloween, and encouraged guests to come in costume. I had made a forest green 13th century kirtle and fashioned a veil out of linen leftover from making the shift. I spent all evening saying , no, I’m a medieval lady, not a nun, lol. I’ve always been curious about the custom of breaking a glass in Jewish weddings. I’m not sure if that’s a thing only in some sects or a standard thing. If you have any information on that or a reliable place to look for the answer, I’d love to know. Have fun at the wedding! It’s been my experience that queer weddings are such a fun and joyous celebration of newly gained rights. Wishing the couple all the joy and happiness!
Ahhh I love a costume wedding!
I remember in the ‘Little House’ books that Laura close to wear a black dress for her wedding, while her mother quoted ‘married in black you’ll wish yourself back.’ This is a memory from 40+ years so I may have it a little off, but it has stuck with me all these years.
Oooh, I wonder if the Great Dress is what those descriptions of the Jewish wedding referred to!
My mother-in-law wore a white linen shift dress with a floral border to my wedding. Even though I was a small wedding (35 guests), it was *very* obvious she wasn't the bride! I guess the no-white rule depends on the level of formality expected of the guests - if it's going to be very fancy, a long white dress can easily be mistaken for a wedding dress so it's best avoided. Otherwise I don't think it matters!
I think this thing of "not upstaging the bride" is a little bit nonsensical. If you're invited to a woman's wedding you should know her well enough to know whether your chosen outfit will upstage her dress, if you don't then you really have no business accepting her invitation. White is a fine color for a daytime summer party, whether or not it is a wedding. It is usually considered a faux pas to wear white in the evening, or when it is not summer (the oft cited rule in America is "after Veterans Day" which is at the beginning of September). Again, this technically applies to all parties not just weddings although weddings are typically a time when following rules of etiquette is expected. A white ball gown for a bride is an exception to the "no white in the evenings" rule, and likewise a white dress for a bride is an exception to the "white is a summer color" rule. But in summer and in the daytime, white is always an acceptable color for anyone: especially if it is not solid white. People tend to bling out their wedding attire, so I honestly would never worry about upstaging either a bride or groom. Though, if the bride is a minimalist and you're a maximalist, I'd perhaps suggest toning your typical accessorizing down a little since this is her day not yours. But this has less to do with colors and more to do with jewelry or scarves and the like, and it's about not interrupting the bride's aesthetic rather than not upstaging her. If she is someone who likes things sleek and clean, then modifying your usual dress habits in that direction for one party is a way of showing affection for her.
Yeah, I think "don't wear white" is definitely oversimplifying the spirit of the intended guideline-- "It's not your wedding, so don't make it about you".
A white wedding dress is lovely. My soft white wedding dress was going to be made of natural fabrics and in a style so it could be worn afterwards (I'm not spending that much money on a dress I wear only once) *and* it was going to be dyed a nice blue after the wedding. I also had plans to bead it so it would be "fancier" for the ceremony and I'd remove it after. Suffice it to say, I never got married (though it was close a couple times)..
I love the idea of designing a wedding dress with the intention of wearing it again! The idea of only wearing something once makes me really sad for all the work that went into the dress.
But on the question of "should you be more formal than the bride and bridegroom" I remember watching some of the TV specials in the leadup to William and Kate's wedding, and one of them followed "an ordinary wedding guest" (a shopkeeper from Kate's hometown) as he and his wife got their wedding outfits. They're ethnically Indian, so she wore a sari, but the husband went to a bespoke tailor on Saville Row to get a suit made. They talked about how William and Kate had requested the guests NOT wear morning dress (because they thought it was old-fashioned and stuffy), but the shopkeeper was going to wear a morning suit anyway. Because it's a *Royal Wedding* and that is what is *appropriate*. You can't just go to a royal wedding in a regular suit! And the tailor heartily endorsed this.
That makes perfect sense! I think one doesn't want to outdress the overall vibes of the event, but for a literal royal wedding that's pretty hard to do 🤣
If I get married again (divorced) I’m gonna wear orange blossoms in my hair… still won’t be a white dress. My first was a champagne colored ball gown. If I get married again it would be in a colorful summer dress.
That sounds lovely! I'm in favor of flowers in hair no matter what.
i'd love victorian advice for dressing in all black whilst making it clear that you're not in even half mourning; it seems like the line between half mourning dress and dress that just happens to be black or in somber colors is nonexistent... which is not the most helpful if you find black is by far the most becoming color on you
My favorite part of Jewish weddings is that there is no "giving away the bride." The groom walks down the aisle between his parents, possibly followed by grandparents, siblings & any spouses, and ending with the bride escorted by both of her parents. The symbolism isn't a woman being passed from one man to another, but of two families joining together. Chasidic weddings muddy this up a bit by having the fathers accompany the groom and the mothers escort the bride, but that symbolism is still there.
Hope this becomes a series and love your historical take on all things, thank you!!!
I found an old tintype of a great+ grandparents upon their wedding. They were married at the parsonage of their minister. The bride wore "a lovely royal blue gown" made by her mother and aunt and a short veil of delicate organza. This commentary was found on the back of the photograph. The groom wore "his black wool Sunday suit." He probably was also buried in the same suit. Get this, the guests brought the food for the reception to the bride's parents. Such was life on the farm in 1855.
OMG almost wish we had such fancy events to go to where it was the norm to continue to wear your wedding clothes for the next year! I love that idea so so much ❤
As the youngest child in a large family I've been to a lot of weddings. In Australia we're pretty laid back and I've worn a little black dress with a shrug and red accessories to a Catholic mass /formal dinner wedding with no problems. Its not often we have large formal weddings which would require black or white tie, at least in my social groups. These days I wear swooshy secret pants and a nice top which is fine for most weddings.
For a less formal or a garden or beach wedding your dress would be fine- even though its white its got such a big bold print no-one is going to consider it a problem.
I was taught to never wear white, black or red to a wedding. Red apparently means you've slept with the groom
I’m planning on making my wedding dress, and intend to be able to wear it for formal events afterward. I’m thinking of a green dress
That is what I thought. Only as I married in the hottest days of summer I decided on a not so formal comfortable summer dress. It just looks formal with the hair up and flowers and all. And now I have a summer dress.
I feel similarly! I am sure I'll end up making the dress if I get married, and I don't want to put all that work into something only to shove it in a closet after one use.
If there is no dress code on the invitation, *ask the marrying couple*! I so hate it, when I have to do the guess work about "clues" in the invitation. I went to a couple of weddings without a dresscode, so it seemed to be "wear whatever festive clothes you like". But... it really wasn't, in the end it was more like "you simply have to *know* what is appropriate", but they won't tell you...
I did follow the rules you discribed "will I look like I could be mistaken for the bride in photos?" & "does this make me feel festive?" and every single outfit got me some side eyes and snide comments either by another guest, or even by the bride or the groom. As well as a ton of compliments and surprise/shock when I told other attendees about the critique.
--> The first time I was wearing a long flower printed halterneck dress. The second time a salmon pink pencil skirt + a cream silk blouse. And then a turquoise knee length wrap dress. So no, I wasn't stealing anyone's show...
There are people who will find something to criticize no matter what-- which is why I think a lot of these color-related assumptions are silly.
My great-aunt broke all the rules at her wedding. She married a divorcée who was already a grandfather, married on Friday 13th and wore green. This was around 40s or 50s. Local snobs said they were never going to work but she showed them and they were happily married their whole lives. She also was the youngest sister and became a grandmother first upon her wedding. My dad tells me she had bragging rights for years lol
I find it interesting the different expectations people have in different places for weddings and funerals. Where I live in Australia, a white patterned dress wouldn't be remarked on and I don't think a plain white one would be either unless it was very fancy because the difference in style between a wedding dress and an ordinary dress is quite extreme. It would be an unusual choice though. Most people wear dark colours with black being a favourite.
I would add that white - being harder and more expensive to maintain in clean condition, would have been more easily available to the upper classes. Therefore, though I don't think I have heard anyone say it; I do believe that a white gown in general would not have been popular with the lower classes, as they would not likely have had the time and money for proper care of a white gown to be worn several times, needing to be cleaned between uses. Victorian and pre-Victorian wedding dresses were many different colors. My great grandmother's (in the late 1800's) was a grey-ish steel blue. I have seen pictures of brides in blues, pinks, and even reds for their wedding day. The color of the dress was far less important than the flowers. Also, there is is symbolism assigned to the other dress colors as well.
Oh definitely! People on a budget were much less likely to go for a new white gown, and a lot more likely to have a new "best" dress in a fabric they could easily reuse. Or, wear whatever their "best" dress was if they couldn't afford a new one.
I went with an off-white dress with red trim that had Ren faire vibes for my own wedding--a family friend is a costumer and she made the dress out of my mom's wedding dress (which was very 80s with the big puffy sleeves). I've worn black dresses to weddings before, as well as red, brown, green, and blue. I think the last wedding I was at, I wore a red sleeveless dress over a natural linen shirt and black leggings since it was a casual wedding and we were up in the mountains and it was chilly.
I seriously do not care what people wear to a wedding. In fact, when I got married, I told my bridesmaids what the wedding colors were and let them choose. I was in a cream-colored dress...they all showed up in the same shade independently. It was lovely. Most of this is manufactured anger to give people something to be angry about, like socks and sandals. People LOVE rage bait regardless of why they are angry.
Yeah, the people who are determined to find something to critique will find something no matter how many "rules" the person follows.
The best part about Jewish weddings is the dancing. Nobody expects you to be good, just to get out on the dance floor and have fun.
I am from the north-west of Germany and here around the year 1900 women usually wore a black dress and a white veil for their wedding. I have seen many photos but don't know any particulars.
Super interesting!
I love all brave brides today, that go for coulorfull gowns. I had black tule (cupcaky) dress with golden stars and felt amazing.... ❤
In the 1500s in Sweden there were a tradition of bestmens (brudsvennar). They were to protect the couple to and from the church. 😁They could also help to kidnap the bride if her family didn't wish for the marriage.😅
I believe the best man in other areas had similar duties-- and in the 19th century this evolved into making sure the groom showed up, was not drunk, et c.
As for curiosities aboutother Victorian fashion, I think maybe you have videos on all of them?
Mourning attire, duration. Accessories & other protocols
Esp. Black new or dyed
Was (lack ofl comfort a part of mourning
Hair jewelry
Other memorial practices related to fashion, or fashion-tangential
Common/lower class fancier clothes/fashion advice for "dressing up" when no nice clothes are available
Costumes & accessories worn to costume balls
When I was a child I went to a 19th century house that had been turned into a museum in a place called Tailem Bend in South Australia. The exhibits included the wedding dress that the wife had worn. It was black. I wouldn't absolutely swear to it but I think I also saw black wedding dresses in similar museums in the Barossa Valley, which was settled by Lutheran Prussians.
I really hope the hype around the white wedding dress will cease. White simply does not suit everyone, let alone in form of a flouncing cupcake. Let brides wear what they want, not what is „social norm“!
@@dressdeveloper I wore a bright orange/gold taffeta skirt with a black corset decorated with Chinese dragons in gold. I don't like white so I was all for drama
This this this!
@@kikidevine694 that sounds gorgeous!
In my part of the world (sweden) brides of the lower classes (my reference is a lot of family photos thanks to my mothers geneology research) often wore black long into the 20ths century.
The reason is money issues. ...people just couldn't afford more than one lavish dress and it needed to be used in burials and fancy parties to.
Black was the go to "dressed up" colour.
I know in the 16th and 17th centuries, true black was an expensive color to dye so it was considered extra fancy. I wonder if that stuck around longer there than in other regions?
I wore brown to my cousin's midday spring/summer black and white themed wedding because EVERYONE I asked said wearing black was bad luck. I stuck out like a sore thumb in the pictures.
If the theme is black and white, I can't see why people would suggest going against it!
@@SnappyDragon I didn't realize the theme at the time, I should have worn black or red
I wore a white dress to another person's wedding once, because I was unaware of the idea it was a faux-pas and it was the best dress I owned. I actually first learned the idea you're not supposed to do that AT that wedding, when this 12-14 year old girl came up to me to snidely tell me so.
After having watched this video, though, I can safely say that my dress was perfectly acceptable to wear, since nobody could've mistaken me for the bride, considering I was ten years old at the time.
Regarding white wedding dresses being conspicuous consumption, I've also seen the idea bandied about that they could dye the dress a different colour after the wedding, therefore letting you reuse the very nice dress even outside of the context of a wedding. I'm not sure how actually historical this idea is, though, so it might just be someone speculation.
My family is from Norway, and the 19th Century was the rise of the folk costume as A Thing Of National Pride in Scandinavia. Many of those folk costumes are black (or other dark color) with embroidery. All are based on late-18th Century clothes with small regional variations. I would bet a great deal that that's what was going on.
Some (especially those developed later) are based on early to mid-19th century clothes as well, but you’re right about the colours: black, blue and red are the most common main colours, with green not too far behind. The general trend is that the wool is dyed a “rich” colour (black is always deep black and not charcoal, for example) and the shirt is bleached linen, usually with whitework embroidery. If the bodice is silk, it may also be a different colour such as gold, which is less commonly used for wool.
Sweden does indeed have a tradition of black wedding dresses. It was mostly worn by lower income brides, who weren't going to waste money on a dress you would only wear once! A black wool dress with long sleeves and a high neck would be respectable in any social situation and could thus be used over and over. When used as a wedding dress it would be combined with a white veil and other white accessories, as well as a bouquet and maybe a small crown. (source: a book by swedish artist and dress historian Tonie Lewenhaupt that would translate to "Black as-" but I don't think it's been translated to other languages).
I briefly considered wearing a black wedding dress since I am a goth at heart, but eventually made a green outfit with gold details. Anything but the usual white dress that I would absolutely get dirty in an instant! My white hooped petticoat had so much mud on it, thank god it was 100% cotton bedsheets and curtains (I made the entire outfit machine washable because I am very clumsy). 😅
That makes total sense! I honestly would prefer just about anything other than white, too.
In the picture taken of my grandparents at their wedding in 1909, my grandmother and her attendant are both wearing what look like Edwardian white dresses. It was a Lutheran wedding. Both my grandparents were first generation Americans from Sweden.
I've read some comments. Don't know if anybody answered the question. I liked the way U answered questions using Victorian quotes :). Would like to see more:) very interesting, great vlog thx. Ciao
The only kind of black I could think of in Scandinavia (And technically parts of the south-eastern German speaking world) is in the fact that a bunad or dirndl at its most formal usually has a lot of black in it. Getting black wool and silk to be black and stay black on a garment you were expected to buy once and wear for every formal occasion for the rest of your life is as much conspicuous consumption as having white silk stay white is. It also makes traditional silver jewelry and decorative colors on aprons, bodices, shirts or just sewn-on ribbons pop, and drives home the fact that they need to be removed to be cleaned (or dry cleaned in modern times). You technically get your "adult" bunad at your Confirmation, and your first silver is part of the gifts for it, with additional silver being gifted for other milestones that come after, but there are elements to a bunad (and some German tracht) that are worn only during a wedding ceremony or after one is married.
I'm speaking in the present tense because I've got Norwegian friends who still hand embroider cuffs and collars for their bunad shirt (cheaper than having an artisan do it) with traditionally dyed black thread (lest the bunad police get you) with the assumption that you are not washing those in the same load as the crisp white linen shirt that is your base layer. For dirndl, there is the book "Alte Volkskunst: Trachten aus und rund um Wien" from 1985 where the authors (claim to) have looked at extant garments and still insist that, if you make a high dress dirndl, you can't go wrong with black, better include some black unless you live in a hyper-specific region, and that black better be ankle length and silk, or very high quality wool, and include absolutely zero cotton in any part of your ensemble. Cotton is reserved for everyday or workwear dirndls you can just throw in a washing machine without unpicking or removing anything, which readers are informed of in the same tone that the internet discusses socks in sandals. (Turns out there's a dirndl police, and they're very salty that no one is listening.)
Obligatory disclaimer: I got married in a knee length neon green and bright pink cotton dirndl, because that was the budget friendly option and it was the easiest way to not wear white without getting commented on. I believe immigrants can wear the dress of the region they are in if they so choose, or wear their own cultural dress for festive occasions, and wave whatever flag they want doing it. I think any gender can wear whatever traditional dress suits them best for any occasion. And just for good measure: the bunad police need to realize that there is a difference between preserving one's culture and history and harassing people in the street over their clothes.
A lot of the “rules” for bunad-wearing (which can vary depending on which bunad you have) started out as advice on what tends to look good and what’s practical if you’re dancing. I break the “rules” for how to wear my bunad every time I wear it because there’s not enough space to place both brooches on the shirtwaist above the wool bodice, so my smaller brooch is pinned to wool rather than linen. And I don’t wear my shawl unless I want the extra layer, because I don’t want to cover up the lovely embroidery on the back of the bodice.
Black is a bad colour for men's suits. Navy or dark grey is a much better choice for your first suit. If you want to wear your suit to a funeral, pair your navy or dark grey suit with a black tie. To a wedding wear a bright and joyous tie.
Why do you recommend navy or grey instead of black? (Genuinely videos, not trying to argue)
@@sarahr8311 more versatile - suitable for the office and weddings with a change of tie. A black suit is also more difficult to wear - looks very austere, drains the complexion, and shows lint/dandruff etc
Loved this video! Only been to a handful of weddings myself.
Still more than me 🤣
I ran into all these weird ettiquette issues when I got married (30 yrs ago sigh) It was pretty low key but kind of fantasy based & I wore a $50 off white empire maxi dress with gold trim detailing & gold threading throughout. I liked the vintage vibe of it. Technically our colors were creme/off white, gold with teal & wine accent colors (which were in a paisley pattern vest & duster the MOD & BestMan & ring bearers wore) We both wore off white & gold. The older ladies in my family kept asking if it was ok if they wore x color. I was kind of pre occupied with school & fighting with my mother over the wedding while trying to secure a venue & figure out guest lists, food, music, etc. My reaction was IDGAF what you wear, wear what you want you aren't in the wedding party. My mom informed me that it was tradional to NOT wear the colors of the wedding party so no one would be confused? Idk, it was a summer wedding (Aug) & hot af, if people wanted to wear off white I didn't think anyone would confuse them with me the bride considering the fantasy costuming. We also stipulated NO GIFTs but got a bunch of glassware & a punch bowl we really didn't have room for in our apartment anyway lol.
my brother recently got married, they opted for a very small 'elopement' with 15 guests including their standing friends and their 3 children. It was beautiful, I did ask if they had any preferances with how people dressed and all I got was blacks fine, nothing bright. I'm know for wearing bright red so that was fair
I got married in jeans and my favorite black blouse! My first wedding my bridesmaids wore black.... I am decidedly not one for tradition 😂
It sounds like your wedding was perfect for you!
Sweet! I love this video. Thank you delving so deep into this. 🥰
I had a lot of fun! Can't wait for the next one.
Fun Random fact: when the Daughters of the American Revolution have their state and national meetings, the "pages" (younger women who are boots on the ground running the conference) wear white to both blend into the background but also be easy to find when you need help.
Since the dress code for evening is formal you have a bunch of ladies in wedding dresses. For the national meeting there are around 300!
It's funny because in Switzerland people generally wear white to a wedding. It's also quite hard to upstage a bride as they usually wear long dresses/ballgowns/fancy dresses. I never understood the fuss about the "don't wear white to a wedding" rule ^^'
My SIL wore a silver dress at her wedding and she looked gorgeous.
I think it's okay if you have some white, like a dress with a white sash or with a print that includes white. You're very clearly not the bride if it's a traditional Western wedding. But any bride who truly cares about being the only one with any kind of white should include that on the invite as part of the dress code.
thanks for this neat video!
Very infirmative, thank you. What about the topic of gender bias clothing, i.e. an event where the wearer is attired in clothing suppossedly for the opposite gender or has aspects of clothing for the opposite gender. Such as a wedding where the men attending wish to wear dresses and the women wearing suits. Or any other formal event that requires the guests to be fittingly attired.
Hope that makes sence.
I don't tend to mess with gender much in my personal fashion, so I'm unsure if I'm the person to make that video-- but I did have a great time doing a video about the history of skirts as menswear back in April!
People tend to overthink what to wear to wedding because they get caught up in the significance of the event. But youre a guest so its really not that deep. Just dress like you're going to a nice dinner with your parents in any color other than white. Its a long day so comfortable dress shoes are a must.
Not sure how it is in the rest of the world but in Brazil, at least for the past 30 years or so, black is seen as a great color for a femme guest to wear (but never a bridesmaid or the mothers of the couple unless it's requested), especially if it's not a cerimony held during the day and/or at the beach, garden etc
A black dress is seen as elegant and not too showy, and impossible to be confused with a bridesmaid, bride or bridal party, so it's seen as perfect for a femme guest. I think it became recommended as the tradition of black as mourning clothes waned and as the ''little black dress'' rose as the symbol of ideal formalwear for almost any occasion.
this was fun--tyvm!!
This one was clever and entertaining
Now I feel less weird about only having been to 3 weddings in my 20+ years of adulthood. My mom and step-dad got married in the early 1990's, her first marriage, his second. They eloped to Reno and her dress was purple. My sister got married in 2012 and I'm embarrassed to say I can't remember her dress at all, but I do remember her accent color was blue.
Jesus your hair looks amazing
Thanks!
I'm also going to my first wedding (for my cousin) in a few weeks. i have my outfit figured out (sans finalizing accessories), but the whole social etiquette has been stressful for my autistic ass lol. my wedding will 100% not be like this i will be telling everyone to dress like it's a ren faire
Yeah the social etiquette does seem a bit needlessly complicated. I'm happy that my friends' wedding is gonna be pretty different than the "standard", and I think will be a better time for everyone because of it.