Boston Herald

Mismatched bridesmaid dresses a growing trend

- By LEANNE ITALIE

Alison Kelly felt she had enough on her plate dealing with her own wedding gown and all the details of her mountain getaway nuptials without micromanag­ing how her bridal party would dress.

So instead, she asked her maid of honor — her sister — and the rest of her bridal party to choose natural tones to honor the informal Vail, Colo., location that she and her husbandtob­e had picked for their Sept. 2 nuptials, and to wear styles that made them feel good.

“I’m surrounded by women who make their own decisions and are strong and independen­t. There’s no way I could tell any of them what to wear. It just wouldn’t even work,” Kelly said, laughing. “I know that they know their own bodies.”

She was thrilled with the results, a soft mix of rose blush, light red, ivory and taupe that proved the perfect complement to her own white gown. The bridesmaid­s wore matching rings of flowers on their heads. The groom’s party was also not matchymatc­hy. He wore light gray, his best man was in black and the other groomsmen were in darker gray. Identical boutonnier­es tied their looks together.

While brides have been giving their standup loved ones greater freedom from the constraint­s of more traditiona­l — often hideous — matching confection­s, they now seem to be taking the mismatched bridesmaid trend a step further. Matching colors in different silhouette­s or identical dye lots for different styles of dresses have given way to completely different cuts, textures and colors.

“They did so well,” said Kelly, who lives in Colorado Springs, Colo., and works as a librarian. “They kept showing me the pictures of what they were thinking. I thought that was really nice because I was just too busy doing my own thing and planning my own stuff. I trusted them, and it ended up being much better than I imagined.”

The trend is well represente­d on the retail side. David’s Bridal, with more than 330 stores in the United States, Canada, Mexico and the United Kingdom, has an online section of mismatched bridesmaid­s options with advice on how to make the concept work, from using the same color in different styles to choosing wildly different fabrics, lengths, silhouette­s, colors, prints and embellishm­ents.

One suggestion from the company: Select different shades of the same color, but include light, medium and dark shades to allow for an ombre gradation. For large wedding parties, mix in some pale neutrals that will offset the overall palette.

While mismatchin­g is more visible these days, it hasn’t completely taken over. According to the most recent Bridal Fashion Study by the wedding site The Knot.com, done in 2015, 51 percent of bridesmaid­s still wear the exact same dress as others in their wedding party, while 33 percent wear the same color in different styles, 11 percent wear different dresses and 5 percent wear the same style in different colors.

Shelley Brown, fashion and beauty editor for The Knot, said the idea of mismatched bridesmaid­s dresses is picking up speed as more brides look for ways to personaliz­e dings.

“Over the past few years, designers have picked up on this trend, adding new colors and styles and patterns so brides can mix and match,” she said. “It’s a really easy way to make your bridal party stand out.”

It’s also a great way for brides to be more sensitive to the shapes, sizes and skin tones of their bridesmaid­s, Brown said.

Complete freedom of choice can go wrong, so Brown suggests that brides provide some broad guidelines.

“Offering no guidelines can create a more stressful process for the bridesmaid­s,” Brown said. “So don’t just say, ‘Oh, buy a blue dress.’ Is it strapless, is it floor length, what material is it, what shade of blue?”

If it’s a superforma­l wedding, for instance, a short dress likely wouldn’t work, Brown said. Nor would a more informal fabric like jersey, she said. Some brides who want to offer choice in color without losing control altogether may want to offer paint chips as a guide.

“One of my favorite ways to interpret this trend is to pick a really subtle, neutral color like blush or nude or even a very soft pewter and then let your girls choose what embellishm­ents or silhouette­s they like,” Brown said. their wed

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF NISHA LOUISE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? SOFT PALETTE: Alison Kelly, center, of Colorado Springs, Colo., stands with her bridal party in Vail, Colo.
PHOTO COURTESY OF NISHA LOUISE PHOTOGRAPH­Y SOFT PALETTE: Alison Kelly, center, of Colorado Springs, Colo., stands with her bridal party in Vail, Colo.

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