Thursday 4 April 2013

Princess Wedding Dresses Photos Pictures Pics Images

PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES DEFINITION

Source(google.com.pk)
The princess cut wedding dresses that you can purchase have quite a few elements common. This article will talk about these common qualities and help you determine whether or not this dress style is right for you. While most brides would like to be a princess on their day of marriage, wearing a princess cut bridal gown isn’t the only viable way of accomplishing this goal. There are a number of positive features attributed to this style that so many women love, the main three are:
Fitted Bodice: These princess-cut dresses are very popular amongst brides because of their fitted bodice. Influenced by the a-line cut, it does wonders for your waistline once fitted. There is no doubt that you will be looking your stunning best once in this dress.
Flares at Hips: The skirt of these princess cut bridal gowns is usually long with the flare positioned at the hips, designed to help those with slim down figures. This aspect is definitely inspired by a real princess dress, this style of dress is here to ensure that you live your dream of being a princess on your day of marriage. While the vast majority of people like the look of the flaring at the hips, those who are quite large in the waist and hip area, it’s unlikely that you will gravitate towards this look, as it effectively accentuates aspects of your body that you would rather not.
 Ideal for Many Body Shapes: This wedding dress style looks good on most women, the bust line is there to accentuate things, however, women who have fairly large busts, may want to try a different style altogether. With the vertical lines on the dress, it has the ability to draw positivity in your direction, whether you are short or tall, neither of these will be an issue to you as you are sure to look stunningly beautiful and elegant. 
princess cut bridal dress is very similar to the a-line shape in that it is bodice fitted. This is a style that works well with so many kinds of sleeves and necklines, and has this natural beautiful flow from the bust line downwards. The lines are clean much like an a-line, with its vertical panels from the hem to the neckline, this has the ability to enhance the tallest of brides as well as slim down ones figure.
Uchenna Ani-Okoye has been writing articles on the internet over the years. For more information on the wedding industry, which will include recommendations, answers to nagging questions and advice, visit his latest site wedding readings civil ceremony as well as The Wedding Shop.
The first answer is more or less accurate, but glosses over centuries of white wedding dresses worn before Queen Victoria’s wedding, and decades of colored wedding dresses after her wedding, and also doesn’t explain why Victoria wore a white wedding dress.  The 2nd answer is mostly rubbish and dates to the mid-20th century.
Long before Victoria, white was a popular choice for wedding dresses, at least among the wealthy nobility.
Weddings were usually more about political alliances and transfers of wealth than they were about romance, and so the wedding dress was just another excuse to show the wealth and culture of the brides family.  Wealth could be demonstrated with jewelry (brides in some parts of Renaissance Italy, for example, wore their dowry sewn onto their dress as jewels), but textiles were also an important means to display wealth, and the more elaborate the weave of the fabric, and the richer the fibres uses, and the rarer the colour, the better the demonstration of wealth.  Before the invention of effective bleaching techniques, white was a valued color: it was both difficult to achieve, and hard to maintain.  Wealthy brides, then, often wore white to demonstrate their money, not their purity.
There also seems to have been some traditions involved with wearing white and luck in the late 18th century.  In The Good-Nature Man, a play by Oliver Goldsmith, first performed in 1768, a maid laments the lack of a white dress at her mistress elopement, saying “I wish you could take the white and silver to be married in. It’s the worst luck in the world, in anything but white.”  Unfortunately, we don’t have any further context to the tradition, and how widespread it was, and in what cultural context.
Historical records though, do back up the frequency of gowns of white and silver.  Metallic fabric were also very common among the nobility, as nothing says wealth more than cloth woven with gold or silver.  Victoria’s tragic cousin Charlotte (who would have been queen had she not died in childbirth, and who was also her aunt because she married Victoria’s mother’s brother ) was married in a metallic cloth, as were most brides in the English royal family for centuries before her.
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES  
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES  
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES 
                 PRINCESS WEDDING DRESSES PHOTOS PICTURES PICS IMAGES  

1 comment:

  1. The information you have posted is very useful. The sites you have referred was good. Thanks for sharing...
    Prom Dresses

    ReplyDelete