The Oklahoman

Designer helped transform bridal industry

- BY ROBIN GIVHAN

Every year, the bridal industry unveils fresh collection­s of wedding gowns and a breathless list of the latest trends. But the truth is that there has not been a significan­t and lasting shift in what women wear down the aisle since the late 1980s. That was when a young bride, disappoint­ed and frustrated by the mountains of tulle, lace and beading that defined wedding gowns at that time, decided to design her own streamline­d dress.

Amsale Aberra, a graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology, sketched out an elegant A-line gown with a high waist and sheer sleeves. It was 1985, and that dress formed the creative seed for the bridalwear business she founded the following year and that she ran with her husband, Neil Brown, until her death April 1, at 64, from uterine cancer.

Aberra, a native of Ethiopia, helped to change the way that women presented themselves on their wedding day. She recognized that not all women wanted to promenade down the aisle looking like a Disney princess, a sweet ingenue or a modern-day Marie Antoinette. She offered women an alternativ­e to the extravagan­t and ostentatio­us fashions of the 1980s. Aberra created gowns that exuded sophistica­tion, sensuality, confidence, restraint and maturity.

Other designers, similarly inspired by the dearth of simplicity and finesse in the bridal market, soon followed with their own refined sensibilit­y, most notably Vera Wang, who popularize­d illusion-netting, and Monique L’Huillier, who quickly became known for her celebrity clientele. But Aberra, whose business continues to be based in New York’s Garment District, was one of the earliest proponents of wedding dresses as a reflection of a bride’s personalit­y rather than a one-aestheticf­its-all costume.

Over the years, Aberra expanded her business to include bridesmaid­s dresses, as well as formal evening gowns. She opened a flagship boutique on Madison Avenue in 1996 and dressed celebritie­s such as Julia Roberts in “Runaway Bride,” as well as Salma Hayek and Halle Berry.

Aberra was one of the few black designers at the helm of her own multimilli­on-dollar fashion business. Before her death, she chose a successor to take over design responsibi­lities: Margo Lafontaine, who served as senior studio director of Vera Wang for 12 years.

“Working side by side, we spent 360 degrees of our life together, and I know only too well both her creative genius and her infinite goodness,” Brown said in a statement. “Words cannot express the personal loss that we feel, but we are comforted by the avalanche of support we’ve received and the commitment of our team to carry on Amsale’s legacy.” The brand will present its spring 2019 collection Friday.

Aberra was not a household name, in part because she kept her focus on the bridal market rather than ready-to-wear and because her signature gowns could cost $8,000 to $10,000. She was featured on television and in magazines, but she did not have the kind of flamboyant personalit­y that captivates 21stcentur­y media. She did not create a singular iconic dress. But she helped to redefine what it meant to be a bride. She recognized that it was simply a title that described a woman on a single day; it did not fundamenta­lly change her into someone else.

 ??  ?? Designer Amsale Aberra, 64, died April 1. She helped strip the frippery and frills from wedding dresses. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY AMSALE ABERRA INC.]
Designer Amsale Aberra, 64, died April 1. She helped strip the frippery and frills from wedding dresses. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY AMSALE ABERRA INC.]

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