The Daily Telegraph

And the bride wore… trainers

The sports shoe has infiltrate­d every dress code from workwear to cocktail attire – and now even brides are ditching heels to lace up, says Hannah Rochell

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When I got married in 2004, I was adamant that I wouldn’t look back at the pictures in 15 years’ time and regret what I had chosen to wear, my hairstyle or my make-up. I kept things simple – a plain dress with no lace or beading, hair worn down as I would usually, barely there foundation – and now that the time has passed, I can honestly say that I nailed it. Except, that is, when it came to my shoes.

I’ve never been a fan of heels. But it just didn’t occur to me to be myself with my wedding shoes, and I ended up panic-buying a pair of hideous high street strappy kitten heels at the last minute. I took them off as soon as the ceremony was over and spent the rest of the day barefoot – I’m not sure I even took the shoes home with me at the end of the night. And I really cringe whenever I see the few pictures where those monstrous things are visible, peering out menacingly from under the hem of my dress.

Wedding season is under way, but if you’re attending as a guest this summer, you may notice a shift. According to global fashion search platform Lyst’s 2019 wedding report, searches for white personalis­ed trainers have increased 61 per cent year on year. Converse.com has an entire section dedicated to “Wedding Sneakers”; glitter, lace and embroidery-covered white trainers can be found everywhere from Kate Spade to that bridal-shoe go-to, Jimmy Choo.

Serena Williams wore white Nike Cortez trainers covered in crystals on her wedding day. As the founder of shoe brand Rogue Matilda, Katie Cary had the skill set to create any style of shoe for her wedding day – her white Sweetheart trainers bore a navy velvet heart on the heel.

My own wedding took place before I worked as a fashion journalist, and before I started writing my blog (Enbrogue.com) which is dedicated entirely to flat shoes. If I got married now, not only would I have the

confidence to think outside of the box and wear flat shoes, I would definitely consider wearing trainers. What could be better than a box-fresh pair of kicks to keep you comfortabl­e on your special day? Trainers have become such a big part of our wardrobes in recent years that now they’re even infiltrati­ng the aisle.

When Katie Johnstone, a 36-yearold PE teacher who spends her working life in trainers and spare time in Dr Martens and Birkenstoc­ks, got married earlier this year in a church by the sea in Cornwall, she always knew she would change into her favourite 12-year-old slightly split white Cons after the ceremony for a walk through the woods to the reception. But she had a last-minute change of heart on the morning of the wedding.

“I knew that I was going to change into them but it wasn’t until the last minute that I decided to wear them for the entire day,” she tells me. “I had a bit of a nightmare with buying wedding shoes, everything I tried on wasn’t me at all, so I bought some very plain, strappy, not particular­ly high heels: the best of a bad bunch really. I put my heels on as I was getting ready and walked down the stairs and I just didn’t feel like me. So I changed and literally had the most comfortabl­e wedding ever.”

It was this same relaxed attitude that drew Natalie Sneap, a beauty therapist, to opt for a pair of rose gold leather Chucks on her big day. Her wedding in 2017 had a festival feel, set mainly outdoors with a marquee, food vans and live music. “My dress had pockets in it,’’ she says: “I think that’s what set me off on thinking about what shoes I wanted to wear.”

Valerie Bull also wore rose gold Converse on her wedding day, matching the groom in a red pair – and I think being able to wear the same shoes as the person you’re about to spend the rest of your life with is a lovely idea, one that Valentina Italiano, who got married in 2015 in Sicily, agrees with. “I didn’t decide to wear Converse to be more comfortabl­e, but because I wanted my husband and I to wear the same shoes.” Wendy Crawford, who runs the fashion boutique Scout in Dublin, also matched her betrothed in a pair of Grenson brogues, before changing into her 10-year-old high-tops later in the day. “I’ve always loved Grenson and Converse, they’re kind of my uniform. You should always be yourself on your wedding day.”

Planning a wedding can be stressful, and as well as feeling pressure to conform to traditions, it can feel like there are a lot of people to please. I wonder if choosing to wear a pair of

trainers to get married in resulted in any disapprova­l. “My mum initially didn’t get it,” says Sneap. “She wanted me to get married in heels and then change in the evening. But I was pretty set that I wanted to wear them for the whole duration. Eventually she said that if that’s what I want and that’s what makes me happy, then go for it.”

But for most it wasn’t an issue at all. “People said ‘of course you’re wearing Converse!’” laughs Crawford. “It probably would have caused more of a reaction had I been wearing heels – the talk of the wedding!” One of the biggest advantages of wearing your favourite everyday shoes on your wedding day is that you won’t end up with some heels you’ll never wear again. “I can remember when one of my daughters got married, buying a beautiful pair of extravagan­t heels and kicking them off halfway through the day because my feet were killing me,” says Bull. “I’ve never worn them since.”

Unlike those wear-once heels, all of these women still wear their weddingday trainers, as Sneap confirms when I speak to her: “I had them on yesterday.”

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 ??  ?? Lace and laces: Katie Cary was able to create her own wedding shoes, opting for a velvet heart on the heel of her trainers
Lace and laces: Katie Cary was able to create her own wedding shoes, opting for a velvet heart on the heel of her trainers

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