Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are you all? I attend a lot of weddings and half the guests wear black dresses.
Op if you upstaged the bride, she didn’t try hard enough or look bridal enough. There is nothing wrong with that dress.
Well guess what: It's incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the dress is cute (49 yr old) here but if her colors were red and black, I would have avoided a black dress. I would have gone navy or purple instead (if I was looking for a darker dress.)
Oh for Christ's sake. You do not have to avoid the color of the bridesmaid dresses. That's ridiculous. White or anything resembling a wedding dress, sure.
Bride is just jealous you looked better than she did. Ignore.
Anonymous wrote:There is no universe where a 4-6 bride in a bodycon red dress feels “upstaged” by a size 16 in a basic black casual dress. Especially not to the point where she called her cousin about in while on her honeymoon.
Anonymous wrote:I think the dress is cute (49 yr old) here but if her colors were red and black, I would have avoided a black dress. I would have gone navy or purple instead (if I was looking for a darker dress.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are you all? I attend a lot of weddings and half the guests wear black dresses.
Op if you upstaged the bride, she didn’t try hard enough or look bridal enough. There is nothing wrong with that dress.
Well guess what: It's incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:Upstaged by that dress? No. Something else is going on.
Anonymous wrote:Not wearing black to a wedding is a southern thing not a northern thing.
Anonymous wrote:None of this happened. Bye.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't think you were supposed to wear the colors of the wedding party, so that would mean no red or black.
But if you told her the dress was black and she didn't care then I don't see the problem.
But honestly, this seems made up who they heck would call their cousin with this nonsense on their honeymoon?
OP called her and ASKED her if she could wear black. Let's stop debating if black was appropriate or not, the bride okayed it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would try to avoid wearing black to a wedding, but that dress is fine. It’s not revealing and it doesn’t look like a wedding dress.
Who avoids black at a wedding?!
Traditionally wearing black was your way of showing you didn't approve of the wedding. Indicated you were in mourning, not celebrating the event.
MIL wore black to our reception. I wore red to her funeral.