Tuesday, 21 May 2019

2020 Brides Wedding Dress Shopping

Wedding dress shopping: Everything you need to know about buying a bridal gown

Shopping for a wedding dress is supposed to be fun - you are, after all, searching for a beautiful garment in which you will feel like a million dollars, for what will hopefully be one of the most enjoyable days of your life.




















But some aspects of the bridal gown hunt can take all the fun out of that process. Is it the daunting prospect of being the centre of attention, even for just a few moments? Is it the challenge of trying to find a gown that will reflect your personality, in a sea of designs that are most definitely not you? Or is it the way insecurities seem to magically resurface in fitting room mirrors?
A few practical bits of knowledge that can help streamline your search and make it more enjoyable. Here is everything you should know if you are about to embark on your own quest from the perfect bridal outfit, from finding your favourite boutique to flying your garment to a different country if needed.
1. Go on a dress shop recce
It is perfectly normal, in my experience, to feel lost as you consider the wide range of possibilities awaiting you. Magazines, Pinterest boards, TV shows and social media all contribute to this state of sensory overload. Here is how you combat it: close the magazines, switch off your TV (or change the channel), and log off social media (a good idea, I am told, whether you're shopping for a wedding gown or not).
All the guests who attended Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s wedding
Then, look up three to five bridal stores in your area, map out an itinerary that makes some sort of sense, and march yourself there. Before you leave, it's a good idea to check each store's policy on walk-ins. Most won't let you try on dresses without an appointment, which is absolutely fine at this stage. Some will allow you to browse dresses but not try them on (great). Some will only let you look at a restricted part of the store (not so great).
The idea here is to get a barometer for what you like. Look at all the dresses. Touch the fabrics (if allowed). Pick up a couple of gowns from the rack and hold the hanger at shoulder height, just to get an idea of what it would look like on you. At this point, you're not so much looking for your actual gown but rather familiarising yourself with the process. You will see other brides trying on their own dresses. You will see dozens of gowns, shoes, tiaras, veils and other accessories. Things will start to feel a bit less foreign.
By taking this little pre-shopping tour, you will also get a feel for each store. Is it uppity or more casual? Are the sales assistants helpful? Do you feel at ease? Can you picture yourself spending several hours (yes, really) here, stripping down to your underwear, and stepping out of your fitting room in a gown that may or may not fit? It's worth picking a boutique (or several!) with an atmosphere that really suits you.
2. Try on everything - even the things you hate
Once you have checked out several shops, it's time to make appointments. Note: some stores will ask for a credit card when you make your appointment, and they may charge you if you cancel later than their policy allows. Some stores will also charge a fee for the first appointment regardless of cancellation. Some keep appointments free of charge. Again, it's worth checking each store's policy to avoid surprises.
During your first official appointment, a sales assistant will most likely ask about your tastes and bring several models for you to try on. You might have an idea of what you want. You might also know what you absolutely do not want. When I searched for my own wedding gown in 2017, I turned out to be the kind of bride who had a long list of nos (lace, anything sparkly, long veils, tonnes and tonnes of tulle, anything that could remotely qualify as a meringue, and my personal nemesis: boleros) and very few yeses. Yet, during my first appointment, I gave it all a whirl: lace sleeves, spectacular trains, cathedral veils, tiaras, glittery belts, princess-y gowns, you name it. (The notable exception being boleros. A bride has to have her limits.)
While you may have deep-seated opinions (and, honestly, more power to you!), there is no downside to trying on a variety of styles. If you try on something you thought you wouldn't like and your suspicions are confirmed, great! Now you can have even more confidence in your instincts. If it turns out you actually enjoy that specific style, wonderful! In your little répertoire of ideas it goes.
Plus, if you're the kind of person who enjoys playing dress-up (and you might enjoy it more than you think), this is a rather unique occasion to have fun with dramatic styles you might never get to wear again. So try everything on - and bring a camera as well as a friend or relative to take photos of you in all your different outfits. One or two days after the appointment, look at the pictures to decide which looks you like best.
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3. The dress shout fit you - not the other way around
I know, easier said than done. Some people don't have the luxury not to worry about sizing, because the bridal industry still has ways to go when it comes to catering to brides of all body shapes. And it can be daunting to purchase a dress knowing it will have to fit in a few months.
What I mean here is: don't worry if you don't know which size you need when you walk in for your appointment(s). Give the sales associate your best approximation and they will help you. Besides, there's usually a limited range of sizes available on the floor anyway, so you will likely try on a dress that's either slightly too small or too large (it can be clipped in the back to give you an idea of the fit). Once you decide to purchase it, you'll settle on a size - and the design will get altered to suit your specific body shape.
4. Picking your dress is only the beginning
So you've been to your first appointment. Maybe one or two or three (or more!) dresses stick out in your mind as possible options. Now's the time to make a follow-up appointment to try them on again.
Side note: even when you return to the store to try on a dress you have previously picked out, feel free to keep looking around for potential new styles. When I returned to the bridal shop to try on my favourite style from my own first appointment, a fun two-piece caught my eye on the store's catalogue. I tried it on "just for fun"... and purchased it less than an hour later.
Once you purchase your outfit, it will be time for alterations. There is no fixed number of appointments here. It all depends on what you want and what your dress needs. But essentially, you will try on your gown and a fitter will pin it in all the right places. Your gown will go away for a little while, then you will return to the store and try it on again. The game continues until you think the dress is perfect. (Most people need three fittings.) Some stores have a flat fee for alterations, while others charge depending on the modifications needed. You may also want (or need) to hire your own tailor for this.
One last thing on this topic: it is recommended to buy your dress about eight months prior to the date of your wedding. Depending on how long you think it will take you to settle on a specific design, you might want to start your search a bit earlier than that - and if you're having a destination wedding, you will probably want some extra time to get your dress to your location. Which brings us to:
5. Have an action plan if you're getting married abroad
You have found your dress. You have purchased your dress. Your dress is now altered to fit every curve of your body. You might be very reluctant to stick your dress in a suitcase and put it on the first plane to Bora Bora, or wherever you're getting married. I completely understand. The last thing you want is for your dress (which is, at this point, literally unique) to get lost. So don't put it in a checked baggage and hope for the best.
There are several things you can do instead - and you might want to start by liaising with your specific airline. Some might be able to place your gown (which you will have wrapped in a garment bag) in a safe spot or a closet on board. But there is another, fairly foolproof way to get your dress to its destination. I tried it myself when I flew my wedding dress from New York (where I live) to Paris (where I'm from and got married). Here is what you can do in this situation:
Accept that your dress won't make it to your wedding location wrinkle-free. That's OK. You'll manage this once you're there.
Place your dress in a garment bag. Then, place said garment bag in an empty carry-on suitcase that matches your airline's dimensions. Yes, I know it hurts to squash those beautiful layers of tulle. Proceed carefully. Handle the garment bag delicately. The skirt on my two-piece was pretty poofy and it fit in a carry-on case. You can do it.
Keep your carry-on with you at all times. This is the entire point of this approach: your dress never leaves your eyes.
Plan ahead of time for your gown's after-flight care. Personally, I (and by "I", I mean my mother, who lives in Paris and was immensely helpful throughout the whole wedding planning process) made sure there was a dry cleaner who would be able to freshen up my dress after its transatlantic flight. The cleaner even lent me a mannequin on which to hang my gown prior to the wedding. People are willing to move mountains to help people before their nuptials.
6. Try not to have a meltdown
Yes, shopping for a wedding gown can be stressful. Although everything about planning a wedding is stressful. But this is the fun part! Your dress should make you feel great. You should be able to move around in it. (When trying on a specific model at the bridal store and during subsequent fittings, don't forget to sit down. You'll probably spend at least part of your wedding day sitting down and you don't want any surprises.)
If something doesn't feel right (be it the colour or the fit or any other detail), it's not up to your body to change. The garment should change to suit your body, not the other way around. Go forth and don't let the wedding industrial complex get you down. You've got this.
3. The dress shout fit you - not the other way around
I know, easier said than done. Some people don't have the luxury not to worry about sizing, because the bridal industry still has ways to go when it comes to catering to brides of all body shapes. And it can be daunting to purchase a dress knowing it will have to fit in a few months.
What I mean here is: don't worry if you don't know which size you need when you walk in for your appointment(s). Give the sales associate your best approximation and they will help you. Besides, there's usually a limited range of sizes available on the floor anyway, so you will likely try on a dress that's either slightly too small or too large (it can be clipped in the back to give you an idea of the fit). Once you decide to purchase it, you'll settle on a size - and the design will get altered to suit your specific body shape.
4. Picking your dress is only the beginning
3. The dress shout fit you - not the other way around
I know, easier said than done. Some people don't have the luxury not to worry about sizing, because the bridal industry still has ways to go when it comes to catering to brides of all body shapes. And it can be daunting to purchase a dress knowing it will have to fit in a few months.
What I mean here is: don't worry if you don't know which size you need when you walk in for your appointment(s). Give the sales associate your best approximation and they will help you. Besides, there's usually a limited range of sizes available on the floor anyway, so you will likely try on a dress that's either slightly too small or too large (it can be clipped in the back to give you an idea of the fit). Once you decide to purchase it, you'll settle on a size - and the design will get altered to suit your specific body shape.
4. Picking your dress is only the beginning
Once you have checked out several shops, it's time to make appointments. Note: some stores will ask for a credit card when you make your appointment, and they may charge you if you cancel later than their policy allows. Some stores will also charge a fee for the first appointment regardless of cancellation. Some keep appointments free of charge. Again, it's worth checking each store's policy to avoid surprises.
During your first official appointment, a sales assistant will most likely ask about your tastes and bring several models for you to try on. You might have an idea of what you want. You might also know what you absolutely do not want. When I searched for my own wedding gown in 2017, I turned out to be the kind of bride who had a long list of nos (lace, anything sparkly, long veils, tonnes and tonnes of tulle, anything that could remotely qualify as a meringue, and my personal nemesis: boleros) and very few yeses. Yet, during my first appointment, I gave it all a whirl: lace sleeves, spectacular trains, cathedral veils, tiaras, glittery belts, princess-y gowns, you name it. (The notable exception being boleros. A bride has to have her limits.)
While you may have deep-seated opinions (and, honestly, more power to you!), there is no downside to trying on a variety of styles. If you try on something you thought you wouldn't like and your suspicions are confirmed, great! Now you can have even more confidence in your instincts. If it turns out you actually enjoy that specific style, wonderful! In your little répertoire of ideas it goes.
Plus, if you're the kind of person who enjoys playing dress-up (and you might enjoy it more than you think), this is a rather unique occasion to have fun with dramatic styles you might never get to wear again. So try everything on - and bring a camera as well as a friend or relative to take photos of you in all your different outfits. One or two days after the appointment, look at the pictures to decide which looks you like best.

Chelsea

I have a bride named Chelsea and I’m working on her veil this week and I absolutely love watching Chelsea Flower show, flowers are a passion of mine. So I thought I would show you how I’m inspired by flowers in my work.











Sunday, 19 May 2019

Round up of the week

The week started with the news that Doris Day would no longer grace us with her presence. If you watch her style through the years it just shows have today we are still influenced by her style.


Doris Day’s style is often overlooked, but it’s referenced in fashion to this day. She may never have had an Hermes bag named after her but Doris Day, who died on Monday age 97, had a fashion ‘look’, co-created by some of Hollywood’s’ legendary costumiers, that has never required mothballs.
Every summer, women reach for the kind of starched cotton shirts, cropped pedal pushers, bucket hats, trapeze jackets and twirling Fifties skirts that we associate with the Hollywood star who understood the power of clothes far better than we ever gave her credit for.
She was 5ft 7" with dancer’s legs, a tiny waist, blonde curls and bright sapphire eyes and an enviable figure, what all of us long for.




















However life passes us by and our wedding day was probably that best day of our lives when we looked and felt our best. The latest Royal Wedding dress didn't fail to impress!!

Lady  Gabriella Windsor arrives 
at St Georges chapel with her dad.







Thomas Kingston with his stunning new wife.
Noted the headband and the detail on the neckline.












The "first Dress"had the most incredible detail.


The first of her four dresses designed and made by Luisa Beccaria, the Italian designer and her team was exceptional.  It had a fitted bodice, a generous neckline and long, sheer lace sleeves with embroidery that continued to the hand, almost like a glove. The royal also had a six-metre veil, made from several layers of pink and white tulle in the same shade as the dress, held together by small, hand-embroidered flowers. 
She said " I'm thrilled with the stunning result of the artistry." The dress took around five months to make and only required three fittings – one in Milan, and two in London. Luisa said: "My tailor is good at taking measurements and it fitted very well from the beginning, but she lost weight, like most brides, so we had to take it in."
I just loved the lace and intricately embroidered detail. Its difficult to pick up on what could see with a brief look.


If only I could see the embellishment 
close up!!




















The flower girls dresses had the same detail on the necklines.

















Detail better in this photo 



















The raised worked on top of the lace looks like beadwork in rows
and then the edge of the sleeves and the waistline had
embroidery work with a Celtic swirl notion as on the hemline.



Can't not mention Pippa's outfit it was a definite winner ,
and Eugenie looking stunning with the delicate black lace layers.
Fergie's sleeve frill was great and the colour on her with the
flamboyant hat, but that length!! even made her tummy look worse!!
 She seems very excited about weddings,
chat is she might re marry Prince Andrew!!

The last royal bride wowed in a black lace layered dress.




The Brides Mother looked fabulous as always.
These days, there is a  huge trend for brides to wear two dresses and the royal did just that, changing into her second dress at the reception. The blonde royal switched it up, wearing a sleeveless, floor length white tulle dress, which was embroidered with mother of pearl.






The first Dress was my favourite, which was yours?



Second Dress, looks like Nottingham Lace!


Monday, 13 May 2019

Be Inspired and Inspire others.

It's not possible for me to share what I'm working on as mostly it's top secret until it's Big Day.
However it's nice to be inspired and to inspire others.
I have this post of my Instagram for joanne_ferguson_bridal you will have seen them if you follow me.

However I also I have an Instagram account at  embroidery_inspo which I try to encourage you to have a go at embroidery yourselves.
I noticed the dandelion's at the road side and this is what I came up with when translated. Not really something suitable for a wedding dress yet!! However you never know what way this will inspire me in future.

I was watching the BAFTA's last night and I heard Joan Bakewell give her acceptance speech, very inspirational. What I took out of it was that we were put on this earth to create. Often humans seem to think of procreation but this time it was more open for those of us who have not had our own off spring to be inspired to create beautiful things as artists. What about the fashion at the awards, well I loved the bright vivid colours, emerald green, sapphire blue, and a bit of this one and that. I always like something bright and different. Loved the cut and classic elegance of the Suzanne Neville dress worn by Keeley Hawes.
In contrast here are some photos of a quirky different ensemble I did for myself.



Also my dad had reordered the programme about Mount Stewart, Home Ground, naturally I loved it. I was fascinated by the piece about the Black bees native to Ireland and the Ladybirds being a sign of Good luck. That notion will definitely inspire me for what I working on at present!!

Its my birthday this week and so that means Balmoral Show, pink blossom and get ready for Chelsea Flower Show!!



Monday, 6 May 2019

Christening Robes made in Northern Ireland

I’m so lucky, some of my former brides ask me to make them a family christening robe. I believe when I make a christening gown it is an heirloom that will pass around the family and pass to the next generation.
Spring as sprung this year I have had robes back for more names to be added to the petticoats and new robes, one has even managed to be on route to America.
It seems funny but some years ago one of my brides, whose profession was a psychiatrist, said to me ‘Do you ever find it hard to part with your work?’ At the time I knew that as I was making the piece for my client I was happy to see them happy to take it. However recently with the robe that was going to America it was the first time I was having trouble parting with it. All I can think was that I hadn’t meet the person it was for, but thankfully the lady taking it to America completely made me forget that anxiousness when she gave me a big hug!!
Here are some photos.








PS! I won’t start a robe until I know the baby is born safe and sound! And I will sit up all night for a week to get it done on time.

Saturday, 4 May 2019

Latest work

Sorry I haven't posted in a while but there are never enough hours to my day. I feel bad admitting it but my Easter ensemble is still in my shop window display but I hope to change it today sometime.
I have managed to take some photos of the work I have been doing so I thought I would show you some of them.