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Is This Okay To Wear To A Wedding

Is it OK to not wear a wedding ring?

I’m assuming you mean while one is married. Most people don’t wear a wedding ring before they are married.People take off wedding rings for a variety of valid reasons: if there’s a risk of losing them (such as when swimming in a lake), if they increase the danger from working around electrical or moving equipment, if there’s an injury to the hand, or simply to have them cleaned, adjusted, engraved, or repaired.Some married people don’t wear wedding rings, at all. As long as that’s what they’ve agreed with their spouses, there isn’t a problem.Now, if someone removes a ring to suggest that they’re not married, when they are, that marriage has bigger problems, and the ring itself is the least of them.

Is it ok to wear jeans for wedding?

Would you be okay wearing jeans to a wedding?Would you be okay with looking a standout when all your friends and family bring out their best lehengas and cholis?Would you be okay with aunties sneering and hawwing at you for being so ultra-modern?Would you be okay with your photos in your jeans with everyone else bedecked?Why would you want to wear jeans to a wedding anyway. Weddings are basically an excuse to get that salwar suits out that you probably bought a long time ago but never got an opportunity to wear. Weddings are an excuse to wear heavy jewellery and makeup without feeling like you are going too far. Sure, you could do that with jeans too , but, indian dresses have a beauty of their own. And besides, I believe there is a time and place for everything. So, if you are okay with being a sort of rebel, then, you can wear jeans all you want. There is no written rule as such right. It's your choice after all. ;-)

Is casual wear okay for a wedding?

Definitely not in the UK! Turning up casually dressed shows a total lack of respect, not just for the happy couple, but for yourself. I suspect this is a US/Canada thing?A relative was invited with her husband to the wedding of a distant cousin over in Canada a few years back, upon arriving at the church it was immediately obvious that she was the only lady in a dress & smart shoes, while her husbands suit & tie were unique to the event…. Everyone else, bride/groom & congregation were in jeans, polo shirts & trainers.Try that here & you will be shown the door.

Is it okay to wear a nude dress to a wedding?

I'm going to a wedding in a few weeks and I've finally found the perfect dress. It's considered nude, and I think it should be okay, but I just really wanted to get some second opinions?

Heres a link:

http://www.dillards.com/product/Jodi-Kristopher-Lace-Dress_301_-1_301_503307860?splashlink=dd_jr_vac_072111&df=03815224_zi_nude

Is it okay to wear pearls to a wedding as a guest?

I frequently wear a pearl necklace, but I know that's a bride thing. Just wondering if it would upset you as a bride if a guest came wearing pearls. I want to be the sort of guest that blends in with the crowd.

Is it ok to wear a black suit for a wedding?

Holy cow, these answers are all over the place. Frankly, you haven’t given a lot of circumstantial details, but for anyone else wondering the same question, here we go:Fit comes first. Whatever you choose, you better hope if fits well. I’d rather have a $100 suit thats tailored well, than a $2000 suit that fits poorlyBlack is classic, and therefore fine in most/all occasions. That being said, if this wedding is taking place on a beach or during the daytime in the summer, you’re going to look a little out of place. If it’s a daytime wedding and not in a formal church, you should consider a blue or grey suit.If you are a groom: you shouldn’t be asking the internet. You should ask your soon-to-be partner. What they think you should do, is what you should do.If you are a groomsman: you shouldn’t be asking the internet. You should ask the groom. What they think you should do, is what you should do.If you are a guest: OK little different here. You can ask other guests what they plan on wearing (with any luck, the wedding will use a service like Guestboard to make guest communication easier). Unless it’s a very formal wedding, an all-black suit may make you appear like the groom.Again, it completely matters on the setting/nature of the wedding. If a black suit is all you have, don’t sweat it. You can dress it up/down with different color shirts/ties to adjust it’s formal look. Just make sure it fits well, and go enjoy the wedding!

Is it ok to wear a silver dress to a wedding?

I'd return it if you could. Whatever normal conventions are, if this bride's going to be uncomfortable with you wearing silver, it's your relationship with her that will suffer. You showed her the dress, and can't change that, she will most likely be upset if you decide to wear the dress anyways.

Aside from the color, I agree it is also much more of an evening cocktail dress than appropriate for a brunch (it's too short).

The yellow dress that Lydia suggested is lovely, or something similar.

Is it okay to wear a strapless dress to a wedding?

Not if it's in a church or a temple.

When you're a guest at a wedding, the look you want is classy, tasteful and understated. If you have anything in your closet that you'd wear out on a night clubbing with your girlfriends, leave it on the hanger and don't wear it to a wedding. You shouldn't wear anything too tight, too short, too flashy (lots of beading, bedazzling or sequins), nothing too revealing, too bright or that looks like it belongs on a red carpet.

Strapless falls into a gray area most of the time. If it's a casual, outdoor wedding in the daytime, then go for it but wear a cardigan or a fitted jacket over it for the ceremony and then take it off for the reception and dancing. If it's in the evening, or if the wedding is more formal in a church, definitely don't wear it.

So, to answer your original question: It depends, but usually it's a bad idea.

Love,
Auntie

Can you wear black to a wedding? If not, why?

This kind of thing very much depends on the culture and country you're talking about. Colours have different significance and traditions in different parts of the world.In Ireland, black dresses would be normal enough at weddings - not the most common choice, but there's certainly nothing unusual about it. Most women do wear more colourful dresses, but you'll see at least a few black dresses at most weddings. White is never worn - only the bride wears a white dress. I'm told colours that are too close to the bridesmaids' dresses are also best avoided (bridesmaids in Ireland usually all wear the same dress, arranged well in advance).For men at Irish weddings, dark suits are very much the norm to the point of being completely ubiquitous. That said, they're normally not full black - dark greys, navy or charcoals would be the most common, sometimes lighter greys. Anything lighter or more colourful than a light grey would be very unusual, though you do occasionally see them (more so for the groom and groomsmen, they sometimes vary it a little these days, pearl grey of some sort being the older tradition).Edit: I should add, tuxedos are normally never worn at Irish weddings unless the wedding is specifically black tie - this will be communicated in advance and is rare, at least in the circles I move in.

Is it okay to wear a gown/dress that has a small train to a wedding?

Over the years of helping friends and family plan and looking for my own wedding dress and bridesmaids dresses and dresses to wear to other weddings, I have never, up until the very present, ever come across a picture of a dress, or a tip on a wedding planning website, that said a train was OK to wear as a wedding guest. No matter how things have changed. There are so many deals out there on cocktail dresses of all kinds that it's a dress you're not going to not wear again- the idea being that you buy a very elegant cocktail dress that will serve you a few purposes.

Do you have a picture of this dress what it would look like with train removed? Is it cheaper to buy a cocktail dress than having the train removed? I don't know if that's your issue (cost).
You and your husband are always going to go to some event or occasion where you can wear a cocktail dress...over and over again. Your floor length dress with a train is one of a kind. It's just pushing the envelope a wee bit too much about what is appropriate- unless your name is Miley Cyrus, then you arrive somewhere with the intention to steal the show. All joking aside though. Don't do it. Get the train removed or find a nice cocktail dress. I looked at probably thousands of cocktail dresses in the last year and gowns to find bridal party dresses my girls would be able to wear again.

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