The Morning Call

Brides say yes to the dress, even as virus disrupts plans

- By Katie Park

PHILADELPH­IA — Once Alexandria Maurizzio and her fiancé got engaged last November, they wanted to be married within a year. Even if a pandemic got in the way.

So this November, Maurizzio, 28, and Philip Thomas, 25, plan to go forth with their outdoor wedding, where they hope to see at least 150 of the 200 guests they invited.

“People have their opinions,” she said, “but our immediate family’s been incredibly supportive.”

As the coronaviru­s strangled a flood of nuptials planned for the spring and summer — 78% are usually scheduled between May and October, according to the Knot, an online wedding platform — many couples have chosen to downgrade and postpone their weddings to at least next year.

“Right now, it’s a little Wild Westy, so to speak,” said Susan Norcross, owner of the Styled Bride in Philadelph­ia. “We’ve never faced this as an industry before.”

At her wedding, Maurizzio, said guests can decide whether they want to wear a mask and show the level of social distancing they want by wearing various colored wristbands.

Brides have said the pandemic disrupted virtually every step of wedding planning, ranging from vendors who canceled out of safety concerns to the logistics of hosting a socially distanced reception.

Yet, couples are still getting engaged.

“Girls are still getting married,” said Kathy Hart, the owner of the Philadelph­ia bridal shop the Wedding Factor, “for which we are very, very grateful.”

In early June, Hart and her business partner, Stacey Veeraraj, hadn’t been sure how much

business they would get when they reopened. Then, women began to call for dress appointmen­ts.

If the pandemic was going to dash brides’ original dreams, Hart said, some would dress to meet the change.

“A bride getting married next month changed her plans,” she

said. “She got a jumpsuit for a City Hall wedding, and she’s meeting with just family in a fabulous dress.”

Despite flexibilit­y from some couples, widespread delays and cancellati­ons have unsettled the $74 billion U.S. wedding industry and its 1.2 million employees.

“I think people were sort of waiting to see what happened,” said Norcross, lead wedding planner at the Styled Bride. She began rescheduli­ng several brides’ weddings in July.

This year, Norcross and vendors at large have taken on an additional and novel responsibi­lity for those who intend to go ahead with their original plans:

Keep weddings as safe as possible from the coronaviru­s.

In addition to wearing masks and social distancing, Norcross recommende­d eliminatin­g the dance floor except for parents and the couple in an effort to reduce the chance of spreading the virus through heavy breathing; seating fewer guests at a table; having ample hand sanitizer; and placing the tables at least 6 feet apart in a pod-like setup she likened to a box seat.

Despite safety precaution­s Norcross said she could put in place, 28 clients chose to reschedule, mostly for 2021.

A few, she said, decided to forgo a big celebratio­n and have an intimate gathering.

“A lot of people have been getting creative,” she said. “Use the deposit in lieu of another event — a birthday party or anniversar­y — instead of a wedding.”

A dramatic change in plans didn’t mean a bride had to change the vision of how she wanted to look, said Ivy Solomon, owner of Lovely Bride Philadelph­ia.

“I think a wedding gown is such a special piece of the wedding,” she said, “and girls still want to be able to wear a wedding gown and feel really special on their day.”

Now three months out from her wedding, Maurizzio said she will soon have her dress after manufactur­ing and shipping delays caused by the pandemic.

And on the day of, her guests will go home with a coronaviru­s-era wedding favor: hand sanitizer.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Brides say the pandemic disrupted virtually every step of wedding planning, but they’re still buying dresses.
DREAMSTIME Brides say the pandemic disrupted virtually every step of wedding planning, but they’re still buying dresses.

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