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How to Make Your Own Bridal Bouquet


A bouquet is a personal touch that often incorporates the wedding colors or theme. More brides are creating handmade accents for their weddings including the wedding bouquets. Whether you want a traditional floral bouquet or something nontraditional, you can easily make your own bridal bouquet. Follow these simple steps to learn how to make your own bridal bouquet.

There are several types of bridal bouquets and flowers for the rest of the bridal party. The traditional bouquet is a hand-tied flower bouquet. A cascade bouquet has a trail of flowers and foliage that hang below the main bouquet. The Biedermeier is a striped bouquet of different types of flowers created by aligning the same type of flowers in circles. A pomander is a ball covered with flowers that is held dangling by a ribbon.

Floral Bouquet

The type of flowers used for a bouquet may be chosen based on what is available in the wedding colors. If you are using fresh flowers, prepare the flowers by removing any leaves and thorns from the stems. Select three or four of the flowers that you want as the central flowers and hold them tight in the position you want them. Add one flower at a time to the bouquet evenly around your central flowers.

After the main flowers are placed as desired, you can add filler flowers along some of the edge of the bouquet and among the main flowers. Baby’s breath is a traditional choice for filler flowers, however other flowers that feature clusters of small flowers or berries can be used as filler. Some flowers used as filler include seeded eucalyptus, aster, bouvardia, wax flowers, trachelium, and delphinium.

This classic, hand-tied clutch bouquet also could be made with silk flowers instead of fresh flowers. The cascade bouquet style can be made by adding longer flowers like orchids or using floral wire to connect flower blossoms in trails under the bouquet.

When you are happy with the overall appearance of the bouquet, you can wrap the stems tightly with floral tape. Once the flowers are secured in the arrangement with tape, trim the stems so that they are all the same length. The tape can then be covered with satin ribbon and lace to achieve the desired look. The finished floral bouquet should be wrapped in tissue paper and placed in the refrigerator.

 Craft or Theme Bouquet

Some brides are opting for a nontraditional bouquet that shows off their craft diva side. Bouquets of colorful buttons or items that reflect the theme of the wedding are popular choices. Are you having a unique wedding? Make a theme bouquet using objects related to the theme.To create these unique bouquets, the bouquet form is created with a styrofoam ball and either a bouquet holder or stick to hold the ball. For a pomander or brooch bouquet for the bride or flower girl, ribbon can be used to hold the styrofoam ball. The ball is then decorated with items that reflect the bride’s personality or wedding theme such as flowers made from colorful buttons, pearls, shells, lace, or silk flowers. If a stick is used, the stick can be transformed into a pretty holder by covering it with layers of tulle, ribbon, and lace.

For more unique wedding ideas, visit Best for Bride and browse or wedding blog. We have a lot of great tips to prepare for your special day and how to make it a memorable event for everyone.

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Wedding Dress Trends

As with any area of fashion, wedding dress designs are always evolving. Designers have unveiled their newest wedding dresses. There are some interesting trends among the new designs. Nowadays wedding dress trends include romantic, flowing fabric and two-piece wedding dresses. Which of the following trends is your favorite?

Sleek Modernism

Some fashion-forward wedding dresses emphasize a minimalistic approach to fashion. The sleek, no-frills wedding dress may be the perfect choice for the modern bride. If you wince at layers of lace and ruffles, you may want to take a look at the simple and elegant sheath designs among today’s hot trends.

Poufy, Flowing Skirts

Contrasting with the sleek modernism trend is the flowing layers of poufy ball gown wedding dresses. The newest designs involve layers of light fabric that create a flowing fullness to the wedding dresses.

Two-Piece Wedding Dresses

A daring new look is the crop top wedding dress. Some of these two-piece wedding dresses show the bride’s abdomen. Other two-piece wedding dress designs are more subtle with the top ending close or over the waist of the skirt. If you are looking for shock value or something unconventional, consider this exciting new trend in wedding dresses.

Color

Many brides are opting for light colors, and designers are answering the call. Silvery colors like a smoky gray, light blue, and lilacs are a favorite. Some designers are including some bolder colors as well.

Wedding Dress Necklines

It seems as though some designers have grown tired of the classic necklines of wedding dresses. Dramatic necklines are the hot wedding dress trend. Unique cuts, bustier styles, and plunging v-necks are becoming more popular.

Wedding Dress Sweaters?

Yes! Some designers have created wedding dresses with sweaters. The top may be a sweater or the gown may come with a sweater that is open in the front. This unusual style has a element of feeling cozy and down to earth while being stylish and bold.

Shoulder Embellishments

There are three hot wedding dress trends that are focused on the shoulders. Capelets, shoulder streamers, and draped shoulder beading are new styles that many designers are embracing. A capelet is a very short cape. Some new capelet designs only cover the shoulders. The capelet does not reach the neckline. In other designs, the capelet covers part of the bodice or the entire bodice. Shoulder streamers are strips of flowing, light fabric attached to the shoulder of the wedding dress. The popular draped beading designs are strings of beads of varying lengths that lay on the shoulder and upper arm.

Even brides who are not concerned with being on the cutting edge of fashion often like to know the current trends. If you are looking for something uniquely new or just don’t want to have an outdated dress, wedding dress trends can help you get ideas for your perfect wedding gown. Brides can find more great tips for finding the perfect wedding dress at Best for Bride.

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Easy Guide to Wedding Dress Trains

Should your wedding dress have a train? When considering whether or not to have a wedding dress with a train, the traditions, ease of use, and etiquette standards may seem a bit confusing. Some venues may make a train more difficult to manage than others. How important is train length? This easy guide to wedding dress trains may help clear up some of the misconceptions about wedding trains.

Wedding dress trains are becoming increasingly popular with recent celebrity weddings. This may have caused brides to take more notice of their wedding dress trains. Some brides may wonder if they should have a train or not. A long train on a wedding dress is a traditional, classic look. If the bride wants to emphasize a romantic, traditional wedding, she may want to consider having a dress with a long train.

Traditionally, a wedding dress with a train is not worn for a second wedding or vow renewal ceremony. However, brides who have their hearts set on having a dress with a train should not let tradition dictate their choice. Your wedding day is your special day. Make it what you want it to be.

Wedding gown trains come in different lengths. A wedding dress train that brushes across the floor a few inches is called a sweep. The sweep may be up to six inches long. The chapel train is one foot to eighteen inches long. A chapel train is very popular since it provides that traditional look while being easy to manage.

The longer cathedral train is at least twenty-two inches long. The cathedral train may be removable or have a bustling option to gather it up for manageability at the reception. Brides who want the classic train but don’t want one as long as a cathedral train may want a semi-cathedral train which is between chapel and cathedral train length. A royal or monarch train is the longest train length. These trains are several feet long. This is typically worn by royalty as the name implies.

A wedding dress train can be an issue for some venues such as an outdoor wedding at the beach or in the woods. Can you imagine trying to navigate thorns and branches with a cathedral train in tow? Consider the venue and your activities for the day when choosing what length of wedding train to have.

Brides who have trains of significant length probably will want to bustle their dresses after the ceremony. Some wedding gowns come with a bustle. If not, brides can prepare a wedding dress bustle by adding a hook and eye or loop to the dress prior to the wedding day. There are several styles of bustles. A certain type of bustle may work better for a wedding dress than the other types. Brides may want to discuss the wedding dress bustle with a seamstress.

 

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Hot Trend: Romantic, Poufy Wedding Dresses

Billowy skirts of organza ribbons and streams of satin are a hot trend this year. Some women shrink away from a high-volume skirt for fear it will make her look bigger. However, paired with a slimming bodice, the full, flowing skirt is romantic and flattering on many women. Poufy wedding dresses with sophisticated style are available for brides with a limited budget.

Full skirts are reminiscent of the classic ball gown style wedding dress. The bodice usually fits snugly. The flowing full skirt poufs out from the bottom of the bodice. This look is very traditional and romantic. The skirts may be made fuller with layers of organza or tulle.

Many modern wedding dresses that fit this trend have skirts with waves or ribbons of organza. Some designers adorn the skirt organza and satin flowers for added fullness and romantic flair. Multi-tiered organza is another traditional design for a full, flowing skirt. In the Sophia Tolli Spring 2015 collection, the Nightingale wedding dress is a beautiful ball gown style with a skirt made up of layers of tulle. The crystal hand-beaded lace is the perfect accent for this gown.

Several designers have increased the volume of their ball gown skirts. If you like the trendy fullness, but are not fond of layers of tulle, you may want to look for a classical dress with satin or taffeta skirts. Alfred Angelo has a design, number 758, with a flowing layer of white taffeta that is gathered to the skirt with pretty embellishments. The loose gathering of the outer layer creates added fullness with a style that is elegant and refined. The bodice is embroidered as is the front of the skirt. This dress has a semi-cathedral train which adds to that classical princess style.

Though full, flouncy skirts often are associated with ball gown style wedding dresses, the flowing full skirts of the trend are not limited to this classic style. For example, the ruffled skirt of the mermaid gown in the Mori Lee 2015 collection embraces the trend without being restricted to ball gown wedding dresses.

When choosing a bridal gown with a poufy skirt, avoid a dress that combines the large skirt with a large or loose-fitting bodice. If the bodice has loose layers of satin, poufy sleeves, or large satin flower embellishments, the added size of the bodice is likely to make the woman appear to be larger. A sleek, form-fitting bodice is a must for a billowy skirt.

Even if the bride is on a tight budget, many of these romantic, poufy wedding dresses can be found for under $2,000. The bride can complete the classic bride look with a wedding veil or headpiece. Remember to avoid added bulk to the top. If a woman is concerned about looking larger than she is, she may want to avoid a bulky veil and opt for something simple.