almab said:
I went to the Princess Diana exhibit today. It is showing in Houston until Febrruary 5. It is hard to describe the wedding dress. It looks better to me in photographs. It is also hard to believe that such an important wedding had such an understated dress. It is very plain. The lace is beautiful but seems too narrow for the length of the train. It has some sparkle from the irricescent sequins sewn on the lace. Some are also sewn on the veil. But the sparkle wasn't enough to really make a showing.
I believe you when you say it looks better in photographs. Even back in the eighties on her wedding day, watching it on tv as a ten year old, I thought it was just a <terrible> dress. Although I'm not sure I follow when you say it's "plain". I take it you mean that the fabric seemed a bit dull for some reason? I would agree with you on that! Also, I think what made the dress look acceptable at all was the fact it was worn by a girl with amazing charisma.
almab said:
It seems most everyone dislikes the dress. I read somewhere - don't know if it is true or not - that the designers fashioned the dress after Cinderella. That might be an urban rumor, but the dress does look like the one in Disney.
wow, never thought about it that way, but you are right, there's an uncanny resemblance!
almab said:
I think she should have used more seasoned designers.
I agree in this particular case, as I've never really agreed with most designs the Emmanuels did.
But on the other hand, some indeed more seasoned designers have from time to time turned out equally terrible royal bridal gowns. (Even if they're off the hook because they lean too much to what the ignorant royal bride desperately wants)
Cases in point:
Valentino: yes he designed that gorgeous dress for Maxima, but remember, he also was responsible for Marie Chantal's hodge-podge, "yes-we're-trying-to-channel-grace-kelly-here"-over the top gown..
Marc Bohan of Dior for Silvia of Sweden: let's not forget that at the time, in 1976, when Silvia commissioned the dress, Marc Bohan was <the> designer in haute couture/fashion land. He was the Karl Lagerfeld and Tom Ford of his day combined. And yet this mediocre-at-best dress.
Victor and Rolf for Mabel. Certainly, in 2003 V and R were already well-respected designers in the most snobby of PAris couture circles. And the dress could've been one of the best ever, if it wasn't for the fact they are said to have listened to Mabel a bit too much who insisted on that ocean of bows. (or they are just cowards who unfairly blamed that bow-fest on innocent Mabel)
Frans Molenaar. This Dutch designer had a virtual monopoly in the Netherlands regarding designing for the upper class set in that country. And then he made Annette's dress....what a disappointment!
So even a well-known designer is not always the best bet. It is a tricky thing for these royal brides. Because they have the financial means and the incentive to have a truly original bridal gown (as in, couture), they basically commision and decide on, a sketch made by the designer based on his views and the bride's wishes.
What you then often get is that the gown that looked so incredible on a sketch, is a less than stellar thing in real life once it's all said and done. In my opinion, MAry of Denmark's dress is such an example. Stellar designer, great great sketch of her gown. But then once it was actually sewn together, in my opinion the result was just less than excellent...or in any case it in my opinion didn't compare in gloriousness to the sketch!