Image credit: Joe Brennan. From The groom’s mother designed the bride’s dress at this psychedelic purple wedding filled with fungi and florals
What makes a wedding dress a wedding dress? In this age, it seems, the answer is just context and intention. Western brides may historically have approached their choice of gown with a set of rules in mind; wearing white was a given, as was the dictum of something borrowed and blue.
But modernity has prompted us to shed our more antiquated prescriptions, and embrace a way of dressing that’s attuned first and foremost to individual taste. Reds and golds, the bread and butter of brides across Asia, have been gaining favour in parts of the UK and North America, as well as Australia. “There are usually requests for latte tones, silvers and blush pinks,” bridalwear designer Steven Khalil told Vogue earlier this year of the increasing popularity of the non-white gown.
It’s an emergent desire well-reflected in the weddings we’ve published here on Vogue. Rosy hues and champagnes have been particularly favoured, taking the form of tea-length taffeta dresses and drop-waist dresses. But recent months have also thrown up a crowd of bolder, ballsier things: a searing fuchsia gown, a breath of lilac silk, a column of sunshine yellow.
Below, discover the best non-white wedding dresses from the Vogue Brides archives.