Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

What to know before saying ‘yes’ to an online wedding dress

- By Laura McMullen NerdWallet

Carol Hickins’ wedding dress arrived at her office “in a plastic bag inside a brown cardboard box,” she says. The packaging was a “letdown,” she says, but the dress was not. She loved the gown she bought from the Ann Taylor website.

That was in 2013, and Ann Taylor has since stopped selling wedding dresses. But Anthropolo­gie’s bridal line BHLDN has stuck around since launching in 2011, and many other retailers have joined the online market. Now, brides can buy gowns online from designers like Nicole Miller, luxury stores like Moda Operandi or from a home try-on site like Floravere. They can even browse wedding dresses while buying jeans — H&M, ModCloth and ASOS have bridal lines.

Less emotion — and less guidance

No matter the site, adding a dress to a virtual cart doesn’t pack the same emotional punch as buying one in person — and that can lead to a more clearheade­d purchase, says Meg Keene, founder and editor-inchief of A Practical Wedding, a website for what it calls laidback, feminist weddings.

You won’t be making that significan­t financial decision as you cry, your mother gushes and a beaming salesperso­n slides a veil into your hair. “You’ll be at home and be able to calmly weigh your options,” Keene says.

But shopping online for a wedding dress is a “more selfguided experience,” says Shelley Brown, fashion and beauty editor at The Knot website, which

offers wedding advice and planning resources. “At a bridal salon, you have someone telling you, ‘Here are your best options, according to all your parameters you gave me,’” she says. Online, “you have to be your own bridal consultant.”

Tips for buying online

If you decide to shop online , how do you become your own consultant? Start with these tips: • AVOID SCAMMY SITES.

While there’s a range in price and quality among the sites mentioned above,

they’re legitimate. Order a dress from one of them, and you should receive a garment that looks close to what you expected.

But some websites steal photos of designer dresses and claim to be selling the same gowns for a tenth of the price, Brown says.

If you see a $300 “designer” dress that is selling elsewhere for $3,000, or if the site includes misspellin­gs, grammatica­l errors or otherwise “feels off,” Brown says you’re probably looking at counterfei­t gowns. “And when (the dress) arrives, it will look nothing like the photo and will probably be unwearable,” she says. “If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.”

• READ THE FINE PRINT.

Even on legitimate sites, scrutinize the return policy and expected delivery dates. Plan your purchase to receive the dress at least two months before the wedding, Brown says, “just in case you need alteration­s or in case you change your mind.”

• RESEARCH FABRICS.

Because you can’t touch the gowns on websites, Brown suggests learning about what different fabrics look and feel like. Peruse a fabric store, the racks of a bridal salon or your closet to discover what charmeuse feels like versus satin, for example. With this knowledge, you can determine your preferred fabrics and interpret

dresses’ online product descriptio­ns.

• LEARN WHAT FLATTERS YOUR BODY TYPE.

Cuts of dresses look different on each body type. A strapless ball gown, for example, may suit a pear-shaped figure better than someone with an apple shape. (If this sounds more like a fruit salad recipe than shopping advice, search “what’s my body shape” online.)

Read about the best wedding gowns for each body type , Brown says, and research the kinds of dresses your “celebrity doppelgang­er” wears. “If you have a body type that’s more like Beyonce or like Mindy Kaling or like Taylor Swift, looking at them on the red

carpet in different things can actually kind of help you determine what looks best on you,” she says. Trying on a few types of gowns off the rack to begin with can be helpful, too.

• TRUST THE SITE’S SIZING.

Take your measuremen­ts, and use them with the website’s size guide. Keep in mind that sizes vary by brand, Brown says, and that wedding dresses are often sized differentl­y than street clothes. So trust the website if it recommends a size 10 based on your measuremen­ts rather than your usual 8.

“Don’t obsess about the number,” Brown says.

After all, your wedding’s approachin­g — you have other things to obsess

about.

This article was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Laura McMullen is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: lmcmullen@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @lauraemcmu­llen.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Bridal fashion from the Amsale collection is modeled during Bridal Fashion Week in New York. Buying a wedding dress online is a much different experience than doing so in a store. Shopping online can help brides make more clearheade­d and less...
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Bridal fashion from the Amsale collection is modeled during Bridal Fashion Week in New York. Buying a wedding dress online is a much different experience than doing so in a store. Shopping online can help brides make more clearheade­d and less...

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