A much ceremony dress and a shorter design make for a more comfortable dance floor once the party begins, are two different wedding dresses that many brides choose.
But there’s another option, as shown by a wedding named Kristina. She was surprised when she received a money-saving suggestion that gave her the opportunity to purchase two clothes for the price of one.
“Skip the second dress. Cut your own,” she advised in a video published last Wednesday (June 19).
- At the reception, a bride wore a $1, 340 wedding dress to feel at ease on the dance floor.
- Kristina had no regrets and planned to wear the dress once more despite some people calling her “crazy.”
- Talk about reusing wedding dresses as opposed to preserving them erupted after her decision.
The wife is seen spinning around in a minidress as a result of two guests who grabbed a pair of kitchen scissors and removed the wavy train.
A wife named Kristina surprised her guests at the welcome by sharing a money-saving tip that made her feel more at ease on the dance floor.
Kristina, who reportedly paid $1, 340 for the procedure and was repeatedly persuaded by many people that it wasn’t a wise decision, doesn’t regret having it done.
“Am I the only one who wants to keep my clothing, which I paid a lot of money for but that I can find photos of my kids trying it on, and sometimes they want to use it for their time? That’s not a thing nowadays”? a TikTok person commented.
The wedding responded, “You can completely maintain it! It’s one’s personal taste. I simply knew I wanted to do it, and I did it.”
“All the customers looked sooooooo stressed,” a second user wrote.
“They thought I was crazy”, Kristina confirmed.
In the comments section of her viral videos, Kristina wrote, “They thought I was crazy.”
Image certificates:
Image certificates:
The wife shared that she prefers to wear a cheap item of clothing many times as opposed to leaving it in her home unattended like an product in a museum.
“Rather of keeping it in my bedroom for years, I will get it properly hemmed and use it for birthdays”, she explained.
However, others supported Kristina’s selection to promote her comfort at her.
“If I actually getting married, I’m bringing a T- sweater and jeans for the reception”, a female commented, while another went a step further by declaring that she “would possibly send pajamas and gathering in those.”
The bride requested that two of her guests use kitchen shears to cut the dress’s flowing train.
Image certificates:
Kristina isn’t the only one to request that her dress be removed during the ceremony. A Temecula, California, resident named Allie Goecke- Butler made headlines in January after asking her husband, Alan Goecke- Butler, to during the reception.
“It was really hot and humid, and I was dancing a ton”, Allie described. “My one bridesmaid, Kaelynn, had a little fan she was trying to cool me down with, and I made a joke about wanting to cut off the bottom half of my dress. We laughed about it and then looked at each other like, ‘Hmm, well, we could do that.'”
She added, “The only person I was nervous about was my mom and how she would respond, but when she saw it, she thought it was awesome.”
A few months after the ceremony, the former bride gave the leftover lace to her mother, who sells handmade denim jackets through her business,.
“She had my jacket done in about two days”, Allie explained.
The majority of wedding dresses are expensive, and only one wears them once. I just wanted to demonstrate that they can be recycled in a cool way that isn’t typically done by simply cutting it short and dying it.
“I also am such a creature of comfort, so I knew I was never going to wear my dress as a dress again. I can wear the jacket frequently while also being warm.”
Instead of congratulating her on her special day, the bride called out body-shaming users who commented on her appearance in a subsequent video.
� � no caption needed
Similarly, Lawyer Taylor Popik her wedding dress, which cost over $5, 000, so she could wear it for other special occasions, like her honeymoon in Italy.
Taylor’s lace Tony Ward gown, which had been sitting in her closet for a year, was discovered in a local tailor in 2022. She was incredibly pleased with the outcome and had it cut just above the knee.
“It’s the best- fitting dress I’ve ever owned, so why not wear it again?”