What about wedding veils?

FamilyMarriage

  • Author Stan Daniel
  • Published December 20, 2019
  • Word count 555

The wedding is a unique event in one's personal life. For the bride, it is her big day, when she can make the most of her central role, but not anyway, but in a dress that transforms her from a simple beautiful girl into a divine character.

At the top of the hierarchy are blue-blooded princesses. In medieval times, when royal weddings were political alliances between two countries, it was important for the bride to look magnificent to strengthen the country's prestige, and the wedding had all the splendor that the country could afford. The bride's jewelry was an occasion of the great bargain and was part of the royal endowment. The dress incorporated the most expensive materials: silk, velvet, damask and satin, and the fabrics were embroidered with gold and silver threads.

The bride was shining like sun because of the countless sapphires, rubies, diamonds, emeralds and pearls sprinkled throughout the wedding dress surface. The train was necessarily several meters long, and the colors were also for the rich. Only the possessed people could afford the red, purple, colors otherwise reserved for aristocratic classes, or blue. History thus records that, during the fifteenth century, during the marriage of Margarita de Flandra, the dress she wore was so heavy because of the embedded jewels that two gentlemen were needed to bring the bride so immobilized in the church.

Some brides prefer to give up the veil outfit, which they find to be too burdensome and old-fashioned, while others do not consider separating from such an important accessory.

If you belong to the second category, you have a choice between several types of wedding veils London.

Types of wedding veils London

The blusher is that part of the veil that covers your face. Whether you have a modern or retro veil, long or short, you can add a blusher, which you put aside at the end of the ceremony, but of course, it all depends on taste. Many modern brides decide to give up the blusher completely.

Romantic and delicate, the mantle is associated with Spain, where it became popular due to Queen Elizabeth II. It is noticeable by the embroidered edges and simplicity: the mantle is a piece of the veil that sits on the head directly, without being caught in the hairstyle. It may or may not cover the face.

More modern is the waterfall veil, which is caught in the cage, either in the ridge or towards the neck and falls freely on the back, having varying lengths. It can be made up of several layers, usually three.

Retro or ultra-modern brides can opt for a veil, so short that it only covers the face or the eyes. It can be worn alone or, for the bravest, in combination with a hat.

The veil to the shoulders falls just below the shoulders, where the brace of the bride begins. If you do not like the one to the shoulders, but still want a short veil you can choose one up to the elbows, which is great for young brides, especially if I choose a dress without straps.

Just a few inches longer is the veil to the waist, according to the brides’ minions, if I choose a dress without train. Fuller scents can only choose this type of veil if it is thin.

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