Showing posts with label Royal Wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Wedding. Show all posts

Friday, 24 October 2014

Fashion Friday: Shoes with Precious Pearls

Often associated with the oh-so-chic Parisian style of Coco Chanel, pearls have a timeless elegance mixed with the charm of bygone eras – making them a wedding staple. As well as jewellery, pretty pearls can adorn any wedding accessory, including shoes! They’ve always been a favourite with the royal princesses – Grace, Diana and even Kate – therefore it’s time we add them to our fairytale wedding wish list!





This Fashion Friday focuses on the fabulous wedding shoes from Ma Belle Mademoiselle – real works of art that can be individually designed to complement the wedding dress! With a vision to transform heels into the most beautiful bridal accessories, Cassie creates bespoke pieces that are unique and affordable. We can’t stop swooning over the French designer’s breathtaking results made with pearls and Swarovski crystals – see her collection online

 What set the Ma Belle Mademoiselle shoes apart are the intricate details reflecting each bride’s unique style and Cassie’s passion for what she does. Each pair is embellished to order – no two brides will walk down the aisle wearing the same shoes!




Ma Belle Mademoiselle is a one woman business, who has been lovingly creating bridal and crystal shoes for over 10 years. Each pair of shoes can take up to 10,000 crystals and pearls, and up to a month to create.  

The fairytale-inspired Cinderella bridal flats, adorned with pearls in different sizes will make you the queen of the ball, yet there’ll be no pumpkin carriage in sight. If you prefer to mix comfort with a bit of height, the kitten heeled pumps, covered in shiny pearls are your best bet to create a classic bridal look.

 


Add a touch of modern love story with crystal, pearl and lace embellishments. To complement a romantic dress, the heart shape detail or a subtle splash of colour will up the glamour factor. There’s also the option to incorporate your colour scheme through flowers and soft details.

“With a variety of styles and heels heights on offer, you'll certainly be the belle of any ball, dancing on air all night. Bridesmaids, mother-of-the-bride and wedding guests will also find beautiful shoes here, and there is nothing else to wear on your special day but the very best bridal shoes!” enthuses Cassie, owner of Ma Belle Mademoiselle.





Quite simply, Ma Belle Mademoiselle is the destination for shoe-savvy brides-to-be and aficionados. Treat your feet to a little bit of shoe haven and your first steps into married life will feel magical. 

Earlier this year we looked at shoes with a bit (or a lot) of sparkle. For more shoe inspiration, check out the feature here, then come over to our Twitter and Facebook pages and share your thoughts!

Friday, 22 July 2011

Face to face with a modern icon

No, we're not talking Lady Gaga here. Instead, the modern icon to which I'm referring is THE dress of 2011, the Duchess of Cambridge's wedding gown.
 
Image via the Guardian

For those of you wishing to get up close and personal with the McQueen dress, it is being exhibited at Buckingham Palace as part of the venue's annual Summer Opening. As well as the dress, you can also see the veil, earrings, shoes, bouquet and cake from the event, plus the beautiful Cartier "Halo" tiara that Kate borrowed from the Queen.

The exhibition also features a five minute video of Sarah Burton, the McQueen designer, explaining how the dress was made and detailing the triumphs of engineering hidden beneeath the folds of silk gazar. Who would have thought, for example, that there was a special panel in the back to ensure that the train hung properly?

The dress will be on display until October 3rd and for more information visit www.royalcollection.org. But be quick - there has been an unprecedented demand for tickets and there is a strong chance they will sell out, such is the power of The Dress!

 - Helen

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

West Weddings on the Royal Wedding: the dress

Clearly, West Weddings has a hotline to McQueen. On Thursday we Tweeted that our prediction for the dress was "v neck, lace sleeves, tiara, slightly A line, veil that forms part of train". Well, four out five ain't bad.
Sarah Burton did us proud. The dress, with its lace bodice and applique skirt, was a beautiful creation involving British craftmanship at its best with all the materials, including the lace,  sourced from British factories. As Kate stepped out of the Rolls Royce, the world gave it a massive thumbs up.

 via the BBC

According to the BBC, a team of 30 embroiderers at the Royal School of Needlecraft worked for weeks on the delicate detailing on the bodice and skirt. These included a rose, shamrock, thistle and daffodil to represent the four nations of the United Kingdom. Embroiderers washed their hands every half an hour to ensure the thread stayed clean and the needles were also changed every three hours to keep them sharp.

Unlike other brides, Kate was somewhat bound by Royal protocol for what she could wear: the strapless dress that is so favoured by British brides today, for example, would not have been an option for a religious ceremony in Westminster Abbey attended by the Queen. Kate's dress sense has been criticised in the past for being too frumpy and "safe", and so the choice of McQueen to design her wedding dress was not necessarily what everyone would have predicted. But the collaboration worked: the simplicity of the dress allowed Kate's best features (her hair, her figure) to be framed to perfection, and the 2.7m train was dramatic enough to work in a venue the size of the Abbey whilst not overwhelming the bride.

Overall, the dress was a success because it is timeless and classic: you can imagine it looking as good in twenty years' time as it did last Friday, something which can't really be said for Diana's very of-its-era creation. Kate's dress was compared with Grace Kelly's gown for her 1956 marriage to Prince Ranier. Since Grace is the epitome of style and  elegance, and a fellow princess, I think the now Duchess of Cambridge would be pleased with this comparison.
Sarah Burton was also responsible for the dress worn by the Maid of Honour, Pippa Middleton, which instantly catapulted her into the global spotlight. Pippa's cowl necked, ivory crepe gown  trimmed with the same lace from the bride's dress showed off her enviable figure and instantly gave her a new nickname of "Your Royal Hotness". Never mind a bridesmaid dress, I know lots of people who would gladly wear that dress to get married in! In fact, I thought that perhaps Pippa's dress was what Kate would have chosen for herself if she had been a Bucklebury bride instead of a Royal one.

 Picture via Digital Spy

 Picture via the Mirror

Although lots of people have been commenting on it being bad etiquette for the bridesmaid to be in the same colour as the bride, traditionally bridesmaids used to wear the same colour, to trick the devil so he wouldn't know which woman was the bride and steal her away.  When white dresses became fashionable for brides, bridesmaids also started wearing white. Fashion then changed to bridesmaids wearing coloured dresses in order for the bride to stand out, but we've been seeing white/ivory creep back in over recent years and I think the Royal stamp of approval will give this trend a further push.
Kate's evening dress was another McQueen creation, a strapless white gazar mid length dress with diamante detail, worn with a white bolero. I think it's great how the couple had the formal ceremony expected of a Royal couple in the morning, but then were able to have a much more relaxed evening reception that seemed to be a reflection of how they would have done things if not bound by the fact it was a Royal Wedding.

So what happens to the dresses now? Well, Kate is apparently considering several options as to what to do with the main wedding dress: there has been talk of it being auctioned for charity and also going on public display so people can appreciate up close the beautiful workmanship involved. And as mentioned before, expect the copies to start hitting the bridal shops next season -  in fact, someone's already done it

 - Helen

Friday, 29 April 2011

What Katie did... A Royal Wedding

We held our breaths.  We placed bets.  We speculated.  We gossiped.  And now the big day is here and we can see just how Prince William and Catherine Middleton celebrated their special day.

The dress was kept well under wraps and we all spent a long time trying to figure out what style she would go for.  Whoever said understated elegance and style, kudos for you.  Kate embodied Grace Kelly’s wedding day look and chose to wear a McQueen gown designed by Sarah Burton.  We saw close fitting Chantilly Lace sleeves, a slightly pleated skirt, simple veil and short train.  She wore her hair down but pulled back from the front to frame the beautiful ‘Halo’ tiara, made by Cartier in 1936 and held a discreet bouquet.  It was her beauty and poise that captured our hearts. 

The flower girls were adorable in white pleated dresses and her Maid of Honour, her sister Pippa, wore a white cowl-necked also designed by Sarah Burton. The flower girls and Maid of Honour’s hair were all adorned with flowers.  The pageboys looked fit for a royal occasion in their red and white attire.
 
Carol Middleton, the MOB, wore a blue Catherine Walker dress and a Jane Corbett hat while Queen Elizabeth II looked regal in a primrose Angela Kelly dress.


Of course there were hundreds and thousands of well-turned out guests, from Tara Palmer-Tompkinson in electric blue to the ever stylish Posh and Becks (who I must say looked incredibly dashing with his medal).


Kate and Wills decked the entryway of Westminster Abbey with beautiful spring trees.  The green canopy made a dramatic entryway for the ceremony and Kate ensured that each was local and replantable; we all love a ‘green’ Princess. But it’s not the first time trees have been used inside a wedding venue and it won’t be the last. Sophie Kinsella’s popular novel Shopaholic Ties the Knot saw Rebecca Bloomwood choosing to have a forest recreated at her own wedding, though I think Kate and Wills decided to leave out the animatronics fauna.
 

If you want to snap up one of the Princes you’re down by one.  William spent the entire ceremony looking like the cat who got the cream, and why not?  Kate looked beautiful and Twitter was awash with people speculating as to what it was he murmured to her at the alter.  Was it “You look beautiful?" OR "You look unbelievable?”

I’ve always had a soft spot in my heart for Prince Harry.  He was the first to catch a cheeky glance at Kate as she made her way down the aisle. I wonder if Chelsea will be the next to wed one of our royal boys?

Just waiting for the balcony kiss!

Hope you all enjoyed it as much as me 
- Hannah

All photographs from ABC News International.

Thursday, 28 April 2011

West Weddings on the Royal Wedding: the day before

Mario Testino via the Telegraph
So the big day is nearly here. Up and down the land, people are preparing their bunting, Pimms and cucumber sandwiches. In London, the police are doing last minute security checks, the dignitaries are flying in from all over the world and the organist at Westminster Abbey is feverishly practising for the hymns. I'm sure Kate Middleton is doing all the last minutes preparations every bride does on the day before their wedding - having a manicure, making sure the dress and accessories are all ready, praying that a nail doesn't break or a spot doesn't emerge.
There's a lot of bah humbugging going on at the moment about the wedding, and I can totally understand where people are coming from. Yes, it's costing the taxpayer money at a time of economic bite. Yes, it involves the Royal Family, who many regard as out of date and out of touch. And yes, it's been difficult to avoid if you really, really don't like weddings and all the resulting media frenzy. All of these topics are worthy of debate, to consider whether the British public should be bankrolling the lifestyle of an elite group of people.
But, if you're reading this, I'm going to guess that you're either planning your own wedding or really like them. And that is the point I'd like to focus on: the wedding. And more importantly, the couple in question. Because, what it really comes down to, ignoring the 1900 guests and the security forces and the questions surrounding the dress and all the hoop-la of a spectacle played out on the world stage, is two people saying that they love each other and want to spend the rest of their lives together. I was lucky enough to be able to do that last year, and have all my family and friends toast this new chapter in our lives. As a couple who seem to be very much in love, William and Kate deserve to have that too, and I really hope that their big day is everything they wanted and more

A wedding is such a happy, happy occasion. So tomorrow, at 11am, I will be raising my glass to William and Kate, and wishing them all the best for their lives together. Because that's what a wedding is about.
What will you be doing for the Royal Wedding? If you're in Bristol some of the WW team will be down in Millennium Square watching it on the big screen - come say hello if you're there too!
 - Helen

Friday, 15 April 2011

Calling all West Country brides!

Are you a bride in the Bristol area? Do you fancy helping to celebrate the Royal Wedding? If so, read on...
Brides are being urged to contact Brunel’s ss Great Britain if they want to help create a giant heart shape on board ship on April 23rd, to celebrate the royal wedding.

A photographer will capture the event, with the best image used to make a unique ‘ship-made’ wedding card for Prince William and Kate Middleton, who marry on April 29th.

Brunel’s ss Great Britain will welcome brides from Bristol and beyond for this once-in-a-lifetime photo shoot – including those who were married or held their reception on board the historic ship at the heart of Bristol’s stunning harbour.


It doesn't matter when and where you were married, as long as you're in your wedding dress! Event organisers will guide everyone into a romantic heart on the ship’s wooden Weather Deck (Top Deck) from 9.15am on April 23rd before the attraction opens to the public. The shot, taken from a distance, should be reminiscent of a timeless and romantic love heart carved into a tree.


Photographer Paul Blakemore has been given special permission by Linden Homes to use one of the apartments overlooking the ss Great Britain to capture the shot. Each bride will be given a copy of the photograph as a memento or to use on Facebook.

The ss Great Britain has long-standing links to royalty. Prince Albert launched the ship in 1843; Queen Victoria visited the ss Great Britain in 1845; Prince Philip was on board ship when she returned to her Dry Dock in 1970 and was the ss Great Britain Project’s Patron; Prince William and Harry both visited as children; Prince William’s uncle Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, is the ss Great Britain Trust’s current Patron.

Events Manager for Brunel’s ss Great Britain, Bronwen Rolls, commented: “We are asking brides from Bristol and beyond to contact us if they want to help the ss Great Britain Trust create a stunning image. This will be used to make a wedding card for the royal couple, wishing them all the very best for their future lives together.

“Brides don’t need to have been married or had their reception on board Brunel’s ss Great Britain to be involved, they just need to be in their wedding dresses.”

A second card will also be made, using the image, for the next royal couple to marry this year, Zara Phillips and Mike Tindall.
Organisers need at least 40 brides to promise their support by emailing marketing@ssgreatbritain.org by 12 noon on April 21st, for the event to go ahead. 

I think this sounds like a fab idea - the ss Great Britain is a beautiful venue (we had a great time there doing the photoshoot for the spring edition of West Weddings). It's also a chance to get your wedding dress out of the cupboard and on again for some more photographs!
 - Helen


Friday, 8 April 2011

Princess for the day

West Weddings is featuring an article today written by a guest author, Jemima Hodson. Jemima is getting married this July and, with the royal wedding nearly upon us, has taken the time to reflect on her journey to the altar and compare it with Kate Middleton's. Take it away Jemima...

Every girl dreams of being a princess one day. They dress up in bright pink dresses and fluffy crowns, wishing for their royal wedding day. And for Kate Middleton, her dream is finally coming true. Similar to Kate, I met my fiancé while studying, and after the ups and downs of all relationships, the proposal came, and my dreams are becoming a reality, although without the royal crown.

The whole world is talking about the 29th April 2011. The wedding that two families in a small town of Bromsgrove are talking about is the season after, 2nd July 2011. Even though Kate and I have similar backgrounds, the planning of each wedding is completely different, with one holding 2,000 guests and the other inviting 200.

First off, there is the budgeting that every bride and groom has to explore; this is obviously different, with mine costing £10,000 and the royals further into the bracket of £20 million. And that is a modest affair. 
Next, is the bride’s dress, the part of the planning that every bride actually does look forward to. With swarms of British designers hoping to make hers, Kate has had no worries about whether her dress will make her bum look big. I, on the other hand have been soul searching though the good, the bad and the ugly. Clifton Brides was my very first experience. The sale gown I tried on was perfect, apart from one tiny detail. It was a size 16 and I was a size 6. Travelling across cities, I tried all sorts; meringue-like dresses, vintage styles and £2,000 gowns that I just could never afford. The more bridal shops I went into, the fussier I got; I wanted an ivory A-line dress, a sweetheart neckline, diamante, a chapel length train, no lace and the list continued. It was exhausting and I know that Kate didn’t have to wade through those seas. But, when I found my ‘Phillippa’ dress, I was glad to have done the wading. 


 Jemima continuing her quest for the perfect wedding dress!
 
Along this road of bridal attire, there is the question of changing into evening wear, and it looks like Kate has decided to do this; her beloved hat-maker Philip Treacy designing her evening head wear. The amount I’m spending on ‘Phillippa’ though has ruled out any change of clothing for me – the only thing I’m changing into are my flat pumps!
Excitingly, I found my bridesmaids' dresses in Debenhams at discount price. Choosing my bridesmaids was easy; I simply chose the five girls that I knew would be there for me during the journey up to the big day. Unlike Kate, I am the only girl of four, so I had no sister to capture the title of Maid of Honour. However, my best friend that I have known since year four has been as close as a sister could be to me, and she enthusiastically accepted the title.

The main things a bride needs to plan have been completed; the fairy tale venues of a traditional church and a fancy hotel, the spectacular dress, the girls’ attire, and the dream string quartet. For the favours I’m not, like Kate, splashing out £5,000 but a friend is making purple ceramic hearts to keep in with the theme, costing me only a thank you card. The flowers are also being arranged by a friend; you get that personal touch as well as saving unnecessary spending. My fiancé has booked a £2,000 honeymoon in Corfu. It’s not a £400,000 honeymoon like Kate’s, but it’s a five star hotel in a hot country – luxury.

There is still plenty to do, but with my wedding scrapbook and a wonderful fiancé the few months prior should be enough to add the finishing touches – like sending out the invites! Even though both we girls have grown up and followed different paths, we will still both be saying ‘I do’ to the man of our dreams, and the rest after that will just be another story to tell.

Thanks Jemima! Good luck with the rest of the wedding preparations. Send us some photos afterwards so we can share them with our readers!

If you're a bride from the South West who's currently planning your wedding and would like to share some details with us, please email  h.mottram@bepp.co.uk


Tuesday, 1 March 2011

What Will She Wear?

When a woman gets engaged, you can pretty much guarantee that, after the initial questions about the ring, the next question will be “so, what will you wear?” For many, the wedding dress is regarded as the most important item a woman will ever be seen in, and the outfit that will define the day. It will look out at you from the photographs, it will be remembered by all your guests, it is the dress that makes you feel a million dollars and that you don't want to take off. In short, it’s pretty special.
To celebrate this (and, as Fashion Museum Manager Rosemary Harden put it, “to jump on the – double - Royal Wedding bandwagon!”), the lovely folks at the Fashion Museum in Bath have put together a new exhibition. Running until January 2012, “What Will She Wear?” is a celebration of the wedding dress, featuring gowns from the 1820s up to the present day.
We were lucky enough to be invited to the launch of the exhibition on 15th February, organised by the team at Bath Historic Buildings and Searcy’s. Not one to turn down an opportunity to look at pretty dresses with a glass of champagne in one hand, we jumped on the train from West Weddings HQ and headed down to Bath.
On our arrival, we met up with the lovely Niki Whittle from Hip Shapes and Bristol Fashion and were given a cup of tea to warm us up, before being shown around the Pump Rooms and the Roman Baths, two of the jewels in Bath’s heritage buildings. If you fancy getting married in a 2000 year old building, the Baths are available for sunrise wedding ceremonies at 8.30am, or if that’s a little early for you, they can be hired for an evening reception. With the steam rising from the 45 degree water, flickering torchlights and the moon shining through the open courtyard, the Baths are incredibly atmospheric and would make a stunning backdrop for photographs.

 The Baths in the daytime - photo via Bath Historic Buildings 

At night, lit by flickering torchlight

West Weddings' Hannah enjoying the atmosphere of the Baths
Our next stop was the Assembly Rooms, where the Fashion Museum is based. Built in the eighteenth century, the rooms in the complex – the Great Octagon, the Tea Room, the Card Room and the Ballroom – are instantly recognisable from television and film productions; the Ballroom was recently featured in the Keira Knightley film The Duchess and also hosted the final of The Great British Menu with Prince Charles and Camilla as guests of honour. All of the rooms are available for weddings and receptions, and can be hired in a variety of combinations, depending on the number of guests. 
The Ballroom when set up for dinner - photo via Bath Historic Buildings
Tom Deller, Corporate Hospitality Manager for Bath Historic Buildings, gave us a talk about the fascinating history of the Assembly Rooms, including the fact that the Tea Room was used as an aeroplane factory during the Second World War and that the stone in it is now pinky-coloured due to incendiary bombs! With their columns of glittering crystal chandeliers (each worth £1million, as they are the original Georgian constructions – luckily put in storage during the war!), marble pillars and stunning plasterwork, the Assembly Rooms are a must for any bride with a love of Jane Austen and Regency pomp and circumstance.
The Tea Rooms with its amazing chandeliers - photo via Bath Historic Buildings
 
Finally, what we’d all been waiting for, the Fashion Museum. Based downstairs in the Assembly Rooms, the museum is a world-renowned resource for fashion from every era – its oldest piece is a silver tissue dress from 1660 and one of its latest additions is a dress from the 2008 Kate Moss for Topshop collection. As well as its permanent displays, the museum puts a number of special exhibitions each year in order to show the public even more items from its huge archive.
“What Will She Wear?” is not laid out chronologically. This was a deliberate decision, according to Rosemary, enabling visitors to see how styles have been repeated throughout the ages. It’s a good idea; when you see dresses from the last 180 years next to each other, you can see how certain things come up again and again – lace, for example, is something that spans all periods, from delicate veils and trains to sleeves and panel inserts.
 
To create a harmonious thread and link all the exhibits, the mannequins modelling the dresses are all adorned with handmade flowers and accessories, made by volunteers who meet weekly at the museum and who have been hard at work since November on creating them. What makes them even more special is that they have all been created using everyday household objects; humble items such as tissues and plastic bags have been transformed into delicate floral headpieces and cascading bouquets, which makes for an interesting contrast next to the silks and satins of the dresses.
Just two of the beautiful dresses on show in the exhibition
The dresses featured in the exhibition have come from a range of resources - Rosemary said that they are extremely lucky with people donating or loaning items to the museum. Some of the dresses are from celebrity weddings, such as model Lisa Butcher’s white backless Bruce Oldfield dress from her 1992 marriage to Marco Pierre White, and designer dresses, such as an Alexander McQueen design from a society wedding last year. These then stand alongside dresses of more humble origins, most likely handmade by the bride, her mother or a local dressmaker, with the only thing known about them being the bride’s name and the year she got married. As Rosemary commented, it’s lovely to think of the love and thought that was put into each stitch of these handmade creations.
As well as wedding dresses, the exhibition also features a previously unseen gallery of photographs from the museum’s archives that came from the famous French fashion house, Worth. A range of high society brides from the 1930s (including comtesses, duchesses and our favourite, the Queen of Egypt) look out dreamily from sepia photographs taken in a Parisian studio, wearing their haute couture gowns. With flowing veils, elegantly draped trains and bouquets of lilies, the collection provides a fascinating insight into dresses worn by the most fashionable ladies in the early twentieth century. Rosemary has been researching the history of the brides and has come up with some fascinating details; one bride was marrying the “pretender” to the throne of France, and so the wedding was carried out in Sicily as he wasn’t allowed to set foot on French soil!
 
Whether you’re a bride-to-be, already married or just interested in fashion, we can highly recommend going to see “What Will She Wear?” It’s lovely to be able to see so many wedding dresses in one place, celebrating this most special of outfits. And who knows, one of them could end up being the inspiration for your big day…

Friday, 18 February 2011

The death of the strapless dress?

You know wedding season is coming up when searches for wedding hats have increased by 235% in the last month. How do we know this? Well, Twenga, the new-generation search engine which enables shoppers to see items from different retailers across the world in one handy place, has released data today about what brides in 2011 are looking for online.

The dress silhouette of the moment, according to the research, is the princess cut, closely followed by the mermaid and empire line. Perhaps marking the end of the strapless dress' dominance over the last few years, the most popular necklines are off the collar, scoop and v necks.

Veils are also up in popularity, with Twenga noting a 113% increase in searches for this item.

Pronovias is the most searched-for brand, but Ronald Joyce and Justin Alexander, in second and third place, have seen a rise in their popularity. In fourth is Benjamin Roberts and  budget-savvy brides have resulted in Nicholas Millington coming in fifth.

Of course, with two Royal Weddings coming up in the next six months - as well as fashion royalty Kate Moss - it will be interesting to see how the dresses chosen will influence other brides' choices. Just as copies of Oscar gowns go on sale immediately after the ceremony, so too have Royal Weddings traditionally led to dress styles being emulated within days of their first glimpse - something that began in Victorian times. Whatever Kate, Kate and Zara opt for will soon be showing up in Twenga's search results.