Vancouver Sun

WEDDING DRESS DECISIONS

Will Meghan Markle say ‘I do’ in a trendy or classic gown?

- SYLVIA HUI

A dramatic ball gown, or a classic, simple silhouette? Sleeves, or bare shoulders?

With just a few weeks until she marries Prince Harry at Windsor Castle on May 19, Meghan Markle most likely has already chosen her wedding dress — though what it looks like is expected to remain a top secret until the last minute.

Whoever the designer is, Markle’s shopping experience is sure to be vastly different from most brides. London’s most upscale bridal retailers explain what it takes to create a luxury gown for a royal wedding, and weigh in on whether Markle will go classic or embrace a 2018 bridal trends.

THE SKY’S THE LIMIT

Royal brides don’t generally pick ready-made dresses. Instead, Markle is likely to have commission­ed an exclusive designer dress tailored to her shape and tastes — and chances are it will be handmade in Britain.

A luxury couture dress like that typically takes months of preparatio­n and a small army of fitters and seamstress­es, and can cost hundreds of thousands of pounds.

“If you were to commission a couture-made dress, you need to have a lot of trust in the designer and a lot of money. Because the cost of the labour involved in making your dress is tremendous. You should expect to start from 30,000 pounds (US$42,000) and keep going up to as much as 300,000 pounds (US$414,000),” said Caroline Burstein, owner of London’s Browns Bride.

It all adds up: Silks are very expensive, as are British labour costs. A top-quality bespoke dress typically starts with a consultati­on to explore what styles fit the bride, followed by measuremen­ts and several fittings done in a mock-up fabric, according to leading London bridal designer Phillipa Lepley.

“If it were a royal wedding, we’d do maybe three fittings to make sure everything ’s to the millimetre, absolutely right,” she said.

Then comes the labour-intensive part: when seamstress­es work on the embroidery artwork and lace. More fittings follow to decide details such as where the neckline sits and how many layers of petticoats are needed.

“For a really exclusive dress it could take 60 hours plus (of labour), it depends on the embroidery. If it’s embroidere­d all over we’re talking hundreds of hours. The sky’s the limit,” Lepley said. “It really is very old-fashioned and all done by hand. It’s unbelievab­le how many hours things take.”

3D PETALS OR CLEAN AND SIMPLE?

Romantic, soft and whimsical styles with 3D details like petals are popular with many brides right now, experts say. But traditiona­l shapes like a ball gown or a column silhouette never go out of style, and many who have watched Markle’s style have a hunch she might go for something unfussy and streamline­d.

“Ball gowns are forever popular, because they look so incredibly dramatic. If you can’t make an entrance on your wedding day when can you?” Burstein said. “Lace is always a strong trend and at the moment you’ll see a lot of 3D petals.”

Lepley said she hoped Markle would choose “something not too over-designed.” She showed off one of her luxury duchess satin gowns with no embellishm­ents, with just a striking picture collar framing the bride’s face.

“This would be amazing,” she said.

“I got a feeling she’d probably like to go quite straight and simple, but she might end up going much bigger because of the drama, the size of the venue,” Lepley said. “She’s got to hit it just right, hasn’t she? Not too ornate, not the dress wearing her. She still needs to shine.”

Susan Courter, who runs WhatMeghan­Wore.net, a popular website identifyin­g Markle’s choice of apparel in each public appearance, agreed. “I’m thinking there’ll be clean lines, a tailored look, very chic. That’s who she is,” Courter said. “I don’t think there will be a lot of lace.”

THE ROYAL EFFECT

There’s no denying the huge effect royal weddings have on what brides everywhere want to wear.

Princess Diana’s 1981 wedding gown, with its puff sleeves, romantic ruffles and dramatic train, defined the 1980s fairy-tale bridal look. More recently, when Kate Middleton married Prince William in 2011, the long-sleeved lace gown she chose sparked a trend for more covered-up, traditiona­l bridal dresses.

“I think people tend to be, ‘Yes I want to follow that through, or I totally don’t want to be like that at all,’ ” Lepley said of the royal effect. “You get a double reaction.”

Markle has set herself apart from traditiona­l royal style, ditching frocks for trousers on several royal engagement­s. If she picks something similarly bold for her wedding, it’s sure to make a statement, Burstein said.

“She may not go for a long dress at all, but a beautifull­y tailored dress and coat. That would send a huge message and no doubt there would be a dramatic shift in what a bride would choose after this wedding,” she said.

And as an establishe­d actress known for her love of fashion, Markle’s wedding style will appeal to a broad audience — likely surpassing the “Kate effect,” Courter said.

“We’ve seen the frenzy with what she wears for all these engagement­s,” she said. “I can really see these brides are going to be running out and saying ‘I want that look, how can I get it?’ ”

 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A top-quality wedding dress typically starts with a consultati­on to explore what styles fit the bride. London bridal designer Phillipa Lepley says some labour-intensive designs can take 60-plus hours of work, depending on the embroidery.
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A top-quality wedding dress typically starts with a consultati­on to explore what styles fit the bride. London bridal designer Phillipa Lepley says some labour-intensive designs can take 60-plus hours of work, depending on the embroidery.

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