Several dozen designers hosted the media and buyers for appointments or put together runway shows and presentations for the twice-yearly celebration of bridal dressing, this time featuring looks for spring 2020.
Some highlights:
Reem Acra
She outdid herself, filling every seat in Midtown’s huge and historic St. Bartholomew’s Church, expanding her guest list to include regular brides.
This collection, a mix of modern mini-dress, shorts looks and more traditional gowns, had a simple celebratory sentiment: Thank you.
Acra was inspired by a message to God she wrote in her Bible 40 years ago, back in 1979 at age 17: “Thank you God you have given me more than I deserve. You have given me more than beauty, you have given me the power to make beauty. Thank you.”
In return, she gave us adorable flower girls in pink holding bedazzled faux candles, messages of love emblazoned on bodices, live singers belting from the audience and at the front of the church, and a Madonna soundtrack driven by “Like a Prayer.”
In collaboration with her fellow designer of Lebanese descent, Joseph Abboud, she also gave us embellished looks for grooms, including a heavily pearled white tuxedo shirt worn under a tailored navy jacket.
For some looks, Acra broke out of the traditional veil mold with sculptural tulle head pieces, putting sunglasses on a few. Many of these brides had swagger for days.
Her church runway was adorned with huge arches of red, pink and white flowers, adding to the fun.
“I wanted to empower all women because I had to empower myself when I was 17 years old,” she told The Associated Press after the extravaganza. “It was a celebration for all of us human beings.”
Phuong MY
Tran Phuong My, originally from Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam, launched her first bridal collection with a challenge to tradition, showing looks in bright red, using long black gloves against white, and fashioning helmet-shaped and flat disc head pieces.
Phuong My, a graduate of the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, is a luxury ready-to-wear designer who generated some buzz with her non-bridal debut at New York Fashion Week for fall-winter. For bridal, a harpist and quartet performed at Academy Mansion on a prime East Side block as her models walked amid flower blooms on twigs in gowns, jumpsuits, suiting and skirts, some with origami-inspired asymmetric folds.
“For this collection we want the woman to be more of a warrior,” she explained in a post-show interview.
Someone, Phuong My said, who gets married but wants to “find their own place” and be truthful to themselves is the customer she’s after. Weddings, she said, don’t always have to be white.
“Red is one of the most popular colors for bridal in Asia,” Phuong My said. “A little color doesn’t hurt anyone.”
Vera Wang
She doesn’t often appear personally for private presentations at her bridal design studio, but this time she did. And her couture looks in muted color, visible boning and draped silk tulle lit up with outsize floral embellishment she used magically.
Her statement blooms came at the collars, on sleeves, as petticoats and as corsages. There was a deliberate randomness to her collection, intended to surprise from all 360 degrees. There were long trains and delicate pieces that trailed from the upper arms. Looks in blueberry, pistachio and the lightest of mauves were mixed with blushes and whites.
For ready to wear, Wang goes heavy on the blacks and grays, to the chagrin long ago of fashion powerhouse Anna Wintour.
“But then I come to bridal where everything should be white. I always can’t stand it,” Wang said. “I just have to mess it up. That’s the rebellious streak in me.”
This was her 59th bridal collection, and she said it’s important to her to reinvent. She’s been experimenting with color for bridal for a while now.
Wang said the late Karl Lagerfeld once told her: “You know, Vera, I do all these outrageous things because they come and they still buy the Chanel bag. But he said I have to shock. If I don’t do that what interest is there in the brand?”
This hand-done bridal collection, which sells for up to $30,000, is couture by anyone’s standard. “It’s really a collection based on a certain freedom, but to get that freedom takes incredible technique,” Wang said.
Amsale
A year after the death of Amsale Aberra, her namesake brand has carried on under the design tutelage of Margo LaFontaine.
This season, the company announced the launch of Amsale x You, a service that allows a bride to “build” her own gown online using couture patterns from the 32-year-old brand’s archives. Starting at $5,000, you can choose a bodice, a skirt and optional belts. The runway show included seven brides who designed the gowns they wore. See Amsale.com for how it works.
This is LaFontaine’s third season at the company, her second show without Aberra’s guidance.
“I keep her with me in everything that I’m thinking and designing and hope to continue to pay tribute to her legacy,” LaFontaine said.
As for the main collection, she focused on draping, hand-pleating and plays on texture. She built texture with embroidery and faux lace. There was a dramatic cape T-shirt on one look and illusion touches Aberra was known for.
The collection was all white. LaFontaine said “a lot of people like to stick with the tradition.”
Neil Brown, CEO of Amsale and Aberra’s widower, said she would have loved the idea of Amsale x You.
“She was a revolutionary in so many respects,” he said. “She had the foresight to introduce CAD design technology very early in her career. Thanks to that foresight, we are now armed with 32 years of perfected couture wedding dress designs that we can utilize to create completely new and different experiences and expand and grow her legacy.”
Ines Di Santo
Fairytales, dreams, clouds, Ophelia. These are just a few of the things that inspired Di Santo’s collection.
She attached a flowing, floral-printed cathedral train to a bandeau and mini-skirt with feather accents, worn with long bell sleeves. One trumpet gown was embellished with silvery stars and came with a bottom done in pleated circles. A strappy backless satin gown was shown with a romantic little tulle stole that fluttered behind, all in white.
“The dress is more than a dress. It’s a personality,” she said.
While she included traditional white, Di Santo isn’t afraid of patterned and color bridal gowns.
“Color is very important for me. Different patterns, different silhouettes, describe who we are,” she said. “I love color. Being Italian, we love color.”
One of her designs was a high-waisted short set with pink floral embellishment, paired with sheer leggings adorned with stars at the thighs. The jacket was worn open with nothing underneath.
Di Santo treated her guests to tea at the luxurious Baccarat Hotel in Midtown, walking her models through intimate tables as the crowd sipped and nibbled on finger food.
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