cutes814
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2005
- Messages
- 1,803
Usually gowns are steamed/pressed before you wear it, so it''s not wrinkled. For after you wear it, there are dozens of ''gown preservation'' companies that charge you for ''preserving'' your gown - ie washing it, and putting it in a nice box. Again, I think this is a rip off. I would take it to a local dry cleaner that''s experienced w/wedding gowns, and ppl usu recommend storing it in acid free tissue paper and placing it in a cardboard(or breathable, non-plastic) box.ou an idea, dresses under $1000 retail are generally considered ''budget concious'' Dresses between $1k-2k retail are ''average'', and dresses $2k+ retail are ''couture''.
Personally, I found most dresses under $500 to be of poor quality (poor construction, fabric, you name it). Once you hit around $1500-2000, you start to get silk gowns, where the fabric is obviously much better, and the quality of construction usually improves dramatically.
From what I''m hearing, the smartest thing is to get a dress that fits and don''t get it until towards close to the wedding? Or will the dress get sold out?
This is the eternal question. It depends how long you have until the wedding. If you have the leeway, I would order the dress anywhere from 6mo to 12 mo in advance, esp if you know what you want. If you wait to order, just verify w/ the manufacturer (have the salon call) that they will not discontinue the gown in the near future. Usu gowns are discontinued in Jan/Feb of every year. Dresses do not usu get ''sold out'' in the conventional sense, and it usu takes about 2-4 mo to recieve the dress after you order it - The reason being the manufacturer waits until there are a certain number of orders for your dress in your approx size, and they cut all the gowns at the same time. (Of course, this does not apply to the off-the-rack places, like Jessica Mclintock and Davids)
The alterations seem to cost a bundle.
About dress size, just make sure they measure you correctly, and go with the size that accomodates your largest measurement. Yes, alterations are expensive, but altering down is easier than altering up, any way you look at it. Also, I would usu not recommend using bridal salon seamstresses - most are just contracted anyhow, so it is best to find a quality seamstress independently, and the cost of alterations will be much lower. To give you an example, the bridal salon I ordered a bm dress from was charging $60 just to hem the dress. I took it to a local dry cleaners, and they hemmed the dress for $20.
Dry cleaning? Is that for after you wore the dress or for before you wear it?
Date: 8/16/2005 12:35:18 AM
Author: flopkins
HTH!![]()
flopkins, that helps a lot! Thanks for all that info. Good for me to know and I''m pretty sure other new brides will find it very helpful too.![]()
Date: 8/19/2005 6:53:38 PM
Author: codex57
Fiancee's dress was $4,000!Was only her 2nd choice too. 1st choice was over $7,000!
Luckily, at that price, tax was included. Gave a gift card for $400 that covered the alterations. They also steam the dress for you after the wedding. Nice b/c we actually have two weddings. One in SF and one in LA. It's in LA right now, but it'll get shipped to SF where we'll pick it up for the first wedding. We then just drop it off at a Saks in SF, they steam it, then ship it back down to LA. Nice cuz we don't have to figure out how to transport the thing up and down California.![]()