Wednesday 9 October 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Source: google.com.pk

History of Bridal Dresses
Until the 1920s wedding dresses were always in the style of the moment, if more elaborately decorated than usual, and more modest than the the most daring fashion. In that decade however, there was a revolution in women's clothing, and hemlines for ordinary wear rose from the shoe to well above the knee. At first wedding styles followed suit, and brides showed their ankles, but as skirts grew ever more abbreviated, it was felt by some to be unsuitable for a church service, and many brides preferred full-length wedding gowns. This choice of following the fashion of the season or reverting to a long dress with a train led in the twentieth century to the development of a separate style in bridal wear which echoed, but often diverged from mainstream fashion (like this Vionnet couture design of 1926).
This was emphasised by the hiatus caused by the Second World War, when clothes were rationed, uniforms were ubiquitous, and frivolity was frowned upon. When fashion came back, everyone was keen to wear long gowns in luxurious fabrics on their wedding day, regardless of the ever increasing popularity of casual, easywear clothing and trousers for women in daily life. As fashion has become more relaxed and sporty, so wedding styles have diverged more, so that although each decade's brides are easily distinguished by the styles then in vogue, it is not because of that style's resemblence to general fashion.
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
The 1920s
When Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon (left) married HRH the Duke of York in 1923, the ceremony took place in Westminster Abbey, and the bridal gown was the traditional full length, with a court train behind. Current fashion was followed in the dropped waist and generally unshaped bodice, and in the way the headdress was worn low over the brow, clasping the veil to the bride's head in a way that echoed the cloche hat every woman was wearing then. The style was described in the contemporary press as "medieval", but was really very trendy, except for the length. She chose a traditional bouquet (which does not appear in her official photographs as she laid it at the tomb of the Unknown Warrior on her way out of the Abbey, in memory of her brothers, and others killed in the War) but many brides emphasised the medieval effect by carrying sheaves of white lilies. Elsie Pennell (right) married Charles Locking in Cleethorpes, Lincs, in 1925. Thinking herself at the ripe old age of 26, a it old for virginal white, she chose a dress she could wear again to dances, of beige lace over old gold silk. The style was pure flapper, with shapeless bodice, dropped waist and short skirt. Her big extravagance (she made the dress herself) was the picture hat, of brown and cream velvet, which cost her 29/11d (£1.50) and weeks of agonising over whether she could afford it. She carried bronze chrysanthemums.
The 1930s
After the "Roaring Twenties" came the depression of the thirties, and the times were characterised by a change in fashion. Waistlines returned to their natural position, and became more defined. Hemlines dropped back below the knee, though they were never to reach the floor again for day wear. Instead of the boyish look, women emphasised their shape again. This was more pronounced as the decade wore on, with the introduction of bias cut gowns that hugged the female figure. Nora Pennell (right) married Arthur Williams in Cleethorpes, Lincs, in 1931, wearing an oyster pink silk crepe dress in the currently fashionable style of boat shaped neckline, fitted bodice and a short skirt to just below the knee. The wax orangeblossom headdress and silk net veil were also of palest pink, and she carried a bouquet of pink carnations. Her three bridesmaids wore similar outfits in pale blue, green and lemon respectively, and carried mixed sweet peas. The vicar of St.Peter's called it a "Rainbow wedding" and said it was the prettiest he'd ever seen. Wallis Warfield Simpson's blue Mainbocher outfit, that she wore at her wedding to the Duke of Windsor in 1936, clung to her every curve.

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013

Bridal Dresses Pakistani 2013 Dresses Suits Mehndi Designs Pic Jewellery Mehndi Lehengas 2013


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