NYT has an article about brides buying multiple dresses - more than they can wear in the ceremony. Did many of you buy "extra" dresses? If so, why? I haven't begun the shopping process, and won't for a while. I am just curious if there is a reason brides are buying more other than simple indecision - the consultants are pushy, the bridal industry is selling us more dresses, or?
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/fashion/weddings/13FIELD.html?_r=1&ref=style
Re: How many dresses did you buy?
Which is why I'm stuck with a very pretty dress from my first engagement in my closet. No takesies backsies.
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I think people put too much stock in 'the dress'.
Mine wasn't the absolute perfect dress of my dreams, but I didn't have the time or energy to shop for 'it'. I also didn't want to spend a crapload of money. I found a dress I liked and was the right price and stopped looking.
You're going to wear it for ONE day. Sure, pictures will last forever, but how often are you really going to look through them? When I think of our wedding, I think of how awesome it was to marry DH in front of our family and friends, not how my dress wasn't perfect.
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Though some people also buy a simpler dress for the reception, and change after pictures. I think the feeling there is the big, fancy wedding dresses are too hot/uncomfortable/heavy to wear all night, though someone can correct me if I'm wrong.
Thanks J&K. Dress regret must be bigger than I imagined.
And I get the whole ceremony/reception dresses. I think for some people that makes sense.
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I'm off to Target to exchange some duplicate gifts, but I shall be around later.
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Personally, once I bought mine, I quit looking at dresses altogether. No trolling websites, no more trips to the bridal shop (except for one trip, but they were all well out of my price range, it was for fun only). I didn't give myself a chance to second guess my decision. It's one dress, that gets worn for one day. Whatver I wear will be pretty enough and we'll have a great time. No way I'd want the guilt of spending half or more of the budget on dresses.
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[QUOTE]Personally, once I bought mine, I quit looking at dresses altogether. No trolling websites, no more trips to the bridal shop (except for one trip, but they were all well out of my price range, it was for fun only). I didn't give myself a chance to second guess my decision. It's one dress, that gets worn for one day. Whatver I wear will be pretty enough and we'll have a great time. No way I'd want the guilt of spending half or more of the budget on dresses.
Posted by mocha beans[/QUOTE]
Ditto! I bought a dress early, and then I STOPPED LOOKING. It seems a lot of the people who buy more than one dress do so because they refuse to just stop looking and be satisfied with the choice they made.
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Well, I am far from a pretty princess (in fact, I was probably one of the most relaxed brides you've ever seen- I was very chilled), but I had multiple dresses.
What happened was that I did a lot of searching at first looking for a vintage gown, and didn't find a thing. I then fell in love with a gown I saw online, but didn't really go and try on many new gowns in person at the time. They only made this gown for a season, and there were none left when I enquired (not to mention, their stores were only in the states) so I hired a dress maker to make it for me from the pictures, before I'd really tried on much else. It was a mistake on my behalf, made mostly because I ignored everyone here who said that you should try on a lot before you buy, as gowns never look the way you expect them to.
Dress maker began work, and I had my first fitting and really hated it. It didn't feel like 'me' at all. I didn't think that even with alterations it would feel at all like me- it was cute and pretty, but it didn't suit me at all. I put a hold to further work on it (I've still got it and it still doesn't fit quite right, but I didn't want to spend any extra on it given I was so unsure about it), and went out trying gowns.
I then ordered a gown and paid a $700 deposit. Said gown never arrived thanks to crazy dress shop owner not placing the order on time (still trying to recover my deposit on that- it's a long story).
I didn't find out about the issues with the ordering of the gown until a couple of weeks before the wedding, which resulted in me having to race out 10 days before the wedding and go dress shopping all over again. In the end, I got the beautiful vintage gown that I'd wanted all along but hadn't found, which fit me perfectly.
So, I fully acknowledge that it is highly ridiculous that I spent money on 3 separate gowns, and I also own the fact that the first one was a mistake made because I really hadn't tried on much and didn't realise that the idea of what I wanted in my head was not going to match with what suited me. The second one I would have worn had it arrived, and ultimately though I was really happy with the amazing vintage gown I did end up wearing. I still can't believe I effectively spent money on 3 dresses for my wedding, though (albeit not by choice!).
[QUOTE]I think long engagements are to blame. I hear about a lot of girls buying a dress right after getting engaged because they can't contain their excitement and then after they've been influenced by the "wedding machine" for a while, they start doubting their original choice and then buy another dress.
Posted by anna.oskar[/QUOTE]
This could be true, but not in all cases. I'm having a long engagement. I'm not going to start dress shopping until about 6 months before the wedding, no earlier.<div>
</div><div>To answer the OP, I may buy a different dress for the reception. I have not decided yet. It's too far away to tell. </div>
Goldie - I don't have any objection to two different dresses for cermony and reception. I think it can be a smart choice to make the day the most enjoyable. These women were buying dresses that they would never wear at all to their wedding!
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1) Dress regret.
2) Wanting a dress that is too bare for the chosen house of worship, so they wear a more modest dress and then change.
3) Those who want to wear a more ethnic dress for the ceremony and then the western white gown for the dancing.
4) Wanting an amazing dress for the ceremony and then not being comfortable in it.