Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Brides of color starting to see more inclusive range of gowns

- By Sadiba Hasan

In January, Tessa Tookes tried on her dream wedding dress at a bridal boutique in Ontario. When the store employees told her she would have to pay $200 for the bra cups of the gown to match her skin color, her heart sank. The beige cups that had already been built into the dress, however, were free. Ivory cups were also a free option.

Tookes, who is Black, loved the dress so much that she put down a deposit for half the price of the gown. But when she returned home, she had time to process what had happened.

“When the dust settled a week later, I was like, I probably don’t want to wear this dress anymore,” Tookes, 28, said. “It just feels kind of icky and wrong.”

When her fiance, Joey Kirchner, 34, learned about the incident, he expressed his outrage on their joint TikTok account, in a video that has received more than 4.5 million views and 12,000 comments. “So you’re telling me that it’s free to be white?” Kirchner, an actor and model, said in the video.

In an interview, Kirchner, who is white, added, “Why is the standard ‘nude’ a ‘nude’ that would match my skin tone?”

After the couple posted the video, a representa­tive from the boutique messaged them and offered the brown cups for free, said Tookes, a model and people operations specialist. But she believed that the boutique did not take accountabi­lity for how the experience made her feel. A few hours later, as the video was receiving attention, the representa­tive reached out again. This time, the boutique

offered the entire dress free. “I think they were getting nervous that we would expose their name,” Tookes said. (The couple did not accept the offer or name the boutique.)

Since then, many designers have reached out to the couple, advertisin­g their inclusive policies. Last week, Tookes visited a few stores in New York and even found her new wedding dress.

“Usually the bridal market caters to white, young girls,” said Rachel Sojo, a bridal stylist in Chicago. That’s why she prefers to work with brands like Esé Azénabor and boutiques like Belle Atelier, profession­als who cater to brides of all ethnicitie­s.

Gbemi Okunlola, the founder of the fashion brand Alolnuko, is particular­ly known for her illusion gowns. After shopping with her sister for her wedding in 2014, Okunlola started her own bridal

collection and designed a sheer tulle for Black women.

“Every part of the dress that would work for a white bride, we make it so that it would work for us,” said Okunlola, who is Black. That includes zippers, hanging loops and threads on the dress. And 25 color options. “It’s not a simple process,” she said, but one that’s a priority for her.

“It does cost a lot more to provide this many options,” Okunlola said. “But it’s almost like brands are penalizing people for being a different skin color to what their default is.”

After posting on TikTok, Tookes said she had noticed some changes. She saw that the website of the designer that had charged for the cups updated its language from “brown cups available separately” to “all cups available.”

“A small change,” Tookes said, “but one that definitely has an impact.”

 ?? ALONUKO ?? A wedding gown offered by Alonuko, which was founded by Gbemi Okunlola.
ALONUKO A wedding gown offered by Alonuko, which was founded by Gbemi Okunlola.

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