Times Colonist

Fairytale event will set trends

Whether it’s the dress, the floral arrangemen­ts or the guest list, planners and couples will be taking note

- ADINA BRESGE

For those who harbour Disney-themed fantasies for their pending nuptials, the union of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle on Saturday promises to be a feast of regal inspiratio­n, wedding watchers say.

In keeping with a long history of royal trendsetti­ng, Saturday’s wedding could dictate styles for seasons to come — from the cut of the wedding dress, to the floral arrangemen­ts, to the length of the guest list, said Molly Lux, a Saskatoon-based wedding planner.

“They’re royalty. They’re the epitome of trends and what’s hot in the wedding world,” Lux said.

“They just do everything so big and grand, and everyone stops and watches.”

The 2011 wedding of Prince William and the now Duchess of Cambridge, formerly Kate Middleton, had a noticeable influence on what Lux’s clientele envisioned for their big day.

After the bride’s sister, Pippa Middleton, made jaws drop in a form-fitting ivory gown as a maid of honour, Lux said she saw a spike in demand for white bridesmaid dresses.

As Kensington Palace scrupulous­ly doles out details about Prince Harry and Markle’s nuptials, Lux said the informatio­n that has been made public reflects current bridal trends as much as it looks to set future fashions.

The couple’s florist is harvesting in-season foliage from the gardens surroundin­g Windsor Castle to arrange designs that reflect the wild and natural landscape of the wedding locale, palace officials said.

An untamed, “picked-off-theroad” floral esthetic has also been popular among engaged couples Lux has worked with this season.

Prince Harry and Markle could also help bring back the cakecuttin­g tradition, which has been sidelined for years in favour of bite-sized dessert tables, Lux said.

For Halifax bride-to-be Maggie-Jane Parker, there’s an allure surroundin­g the royal wedding for both practical and aspiration­al reasons.

“As a young girl, you dream of that princess wedding and finding prince charming, and it’s still very much in the narrative of romantic stories, even today,” Parker said. “There’s appeal, too, in the kind of fanfare of it, because most people would not necessaril­y have a wedding of that size or that grandeur.”

As she plans her wedding on P.E.I. in August, 24-year-old Parker said she is interested to see how Harry and Markle will continue to buck the royal status quo.

A former actor and a divorcee, Markle’s inclusion in the royal family signals a break from stuffy notions that your true love has to be your first, Parker said.

“I think it’s a nice narrative to have that maybe your second marriage is to a prince.”

Parker said she’s heard that many engaged couples have copied the royal request for charitable donations in lieu of gifts, or have reallocate­d their budgets for wedding favours toward good causes.

She and her fiancé have drawn inspiratio­n from the couple’s politician-averse guest list, which, she said, has helped to relieve some of the pressure when it comes to inviting divisive figures to her own nuptials.

If Harry and Markle can snub global leaders such as British Prime Minister Theresa May, U.S. President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Parker said, “maybe not inviting that uncle isn’t going to be the end of the world.”

One of the most hotly anticipate­d reveals in the wedding world will come when Markle steps out in her wedding dress, said Kim Ironmonger, designer and owner of Toronto’s Valencienn­e Bridal.

“The minute the dress is coming out of the carriage, designers are very rapidly taking inspiratio­n from that dress, or even actually copying that dress as closely as possible,” she said. “Whatever look they’re going for, they could set a trend.”

In recent years, Ironmonger said, many of her clients have sought to replicate the longsleeve­d lace the Duchess wore on her wedding day.

Ironmonger expects Markle to take wedding fashions in a bolder direction than the last royal bride, who, perhaps due to proximity to the throne, wore a more conservati­ve gown.

“I think Meghan is very unique, and she’s going to be looking for a very different dress,” Ironmonger said. “We’re going to have some fun surprises.”

Among the dressmaker­s who have been floated for the coveted royal commission are Londonbase­d luxury brand Ralph & Russo and Canadian-born designer Erdem Moralioglu’s British fashion house, both of whom Ironmonger thinks could pull off the embellishe­d, princess-cut gown she envisions for Markle.

Toronto-based royal watcher Patricia Treble, who runs WriteRoyal­ty.com, said whichever designer Markle chooses, the dress will likely be preserved for posterity.

She said many royal wedding dresses are treated as “works of art” to be put on display, and some have even altered the course of fashion.

Colourful wedding gowns were all the rage when Queen Victoria wore a white dress to marry Prince Albert in 1840 — a style decision that would later be credited with kicking off the white-wedding tradition, Treble said. But it’s too soon to say whether Markle will be a style icon in the vein of Harry’s late mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, she added.

However, Treble said she could see the soon-to-be royal making her mark on nuptial fashions, perhaps even upending the Victorian white wedding tradition by wearing blush pink. “She could do anything she wants.”

 ??  ?? A wedding dress from Toronto-based Valencienn­e Bridal designer Kim Ironmonger that was inspired by the one Kate Middleton wore for her wedding in 2011.
A wedding dress from Toronto-based Valencienn­e Bridal designer Kim Ironmonger that was inspired by the one Kate Middleton wore for her wedding in 2011.

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