26 Green Bridesmaid Dresses from Real Weddings, From Pale Sage to Deep Emerald
Green bridesmaid dresses have gone from “unexpected choice” to “obviously, why didn’t I think of that sooner.” The color photographs beautifully, reads as romantic without trying, and sits at ease in almost every season. The tricky part isn’t deciding on green. It’s deciding which green.
Sage is quiet and dreamy, the kind of color that makes outdoor ceremonies look like they were art-directed. Hunter green brings drama and depth, especially in fall. Olive leans warm and earthy. Emerald is bold, jewel-toned, and not sorry about it. The good news: all of them work. The better news: you can mix shades too, and it still looks intentional.
We pulled together real wedding photos spanning the full spectrum so you can see how each shade actually photographs. Whether your wedding is a boho hillside ceremony or a formal evening affair, click through to the full wedding for more inspiration. And if you want to keep browsing, our Real Weddings gallery has thousands more.
Our Favorite Green Bridesmaid Dresses
Deep Forest Green Off-Shoulder Floor-Length Gowns

Nine bridesmaids, one shade of forest green, zero disagreements. Alexa went with matching off-shoulder chiffon gowns in a deep hunter-meets-forest tone that reads almost jewel-like against the blue of Narragansett Bay. The off-shoulder neckline works inclusively across different body types, and the long flowing skirt made the whole group look like they had a stylist on retainer.
See Alexa and James’s Newport Wedding →
Hunter Green Spaghetti-Strap Halter Gowns

Hunter green and autumn light are made for each other, and this fall wedding at a Maryland barn made a very convincing case for that combination. The bridesmaids wore floor-length spaghetti-strap halter gowns in a deep, rich green that played beautifully against sunflower and wildflower bouquets in warm oranges and yellows. The white wrap shawls kept them comfortable in the October air without messing with the aesthetic.
See Amanda and Greg’s Maryland Barn Wedding →
Deep Emerald Cowl-Neck Tea-Length Dresses


The cowl neckline is one of those dress details that photographs especially well because it adds movement without fuss. These deep emerald green tea-length dresses at a vintage-styled Mercury Hall wedding in Austin do exactly that — the soft drape of the neckline paired with the bold jewel-tone color is a combination that holds up across both candid and posed shots. Bright pink and peach bouquets were a confident choice against the green, and the floral-print heels were a small detail that registered in every photo.
See Kelly and Adham’s Mercury Hall Wedding →
Matching Emerald Cold-Shoulder Flutter-Sleeve Gowns


This Alice in Wonderland-themed wedding at Annie Lane Wedding Resort paired an emerald green palette with a waterfront setting, and it worked exactly as dramatically as you’d hope. The cold-shoulder flutter sleeves add softness without going full princess, and the deep V-neckline keeps the look sophisticated. The back view shows the fabric draping beautifully, which matters on a long-exposure ceremony photo more than most brides realize.
See Katie and Bobby’s Lake Wedding →
Mismatched Emerald: Puff-Sleeve Midi and V-Neck Knee-Length

If you want your bridesmaids in the same color but not the same dress, this San Diego Zoo garden wedding is your reference photo. One bridesmaid wore an off-shoulder puff-sleeve satin midi in deep emerald while the other wore a V-neck knee-length chiffon in the same jewel-tone green. Different styles, same color, wildly cohesive. The massive tropical white orchid and monstera bouquets were peak California.
See Lauren and Brett’s San Diego Zoo Wedding →
Emerald and Black Mixed Cocktail Dresses

Not every bridal party has to pick one color. This DIY wedding at Aubrey Hall split the bridesmaids between deep emerald green and black short cocktail dresses, and the mix works because the emerald is saturated enough to hold its own. The green dresses have a cap-sleeve jeweled neckline detail that adds some vintage personality. It’s a bold call that photographs with a lot of energy, which this candid group shot shows well.
See this DIY Aubrey Hall Wedding →
Olive Green Knee-Length Mismatched Styles

Olive green sits in a warm, earthy territory that photographs especially well at golden hour, as this Austin, Texas wedding demonstrates thoroughly. The five bridesmaids wore mismatched knee-length styles, all in the same olive tone: one-shoulder with ruching, strapless with a bow, wrap-style. Short bridesmaid dresses get unfairly overlooked in the floor-length conversation, but this photo makes a case that knee-length can be just as striking.
See Shelby and Martin’s Austin Wedding →
Light Sage One-Shoulder Floor-Length Gowns

Light sage is the shade that looks like it was always supposed to be there. This tea-themed farm wedding in North Carolina used a pale seafoam-sage one-shoulder chiffon gown across all four bridesmaids, and the result under the tree canopy at Summerfield Farms is genuinely lovely. Blush and white peony bouquets kept the palette warm and romantic without competing with the gowns.
See Kristina and Justin’s North Carolina Farm Wedding →
Mismatched Pale Sage Floor-Length Styles


Mismatched bridesmaid dresses in one shade is the format that makes everyone happy: the bridesmaids get to wear something that actually fits and flatters them, and the photos still look cohesive. At this earthy-toned wedding at The Addison in Boca Raton, the bridesmaids wore mismatched sage and pale green floor-length styles, from deep V-neck to one-shoulder to off-shoulder wrap. The back-view photo shows off how the different silhouettes work together as one palette.
See Chrissy and Ryan’s Boca Raton Wedding →
Sage Mint One-Shoulder Chiffon Floor-Length Gowns


The orange sunglasses are a fun bonus, but what’s actually worth noting in this Georgia farm wedding photo is the sage mint one-shoulder chiffon gown. It’s a light, warm-toned mint that reads green without going full seafoam, and it sits comfortably between the sage and mint ends of the spectrum. The back-view shot adds a nice look at the dress fabric and the peach and white bouquets that paired with it.
See Kelsey and Mike’s Georgia Farm Wedding →
Mint Green Lace-Bodice Knee-Length Dresses

Lace on top, chiffon on the bottom: it’s a combination that bridges the gap between formal and soft, and in light mint green it reads fresh without being precious. Six bridesmaids wore this same style at a Pensacola wedding at Old Christ Church, and the uniformity works here because the dress itself has enough detail to carry the look. The lace cap-sleeve adds texture that photographs well in outdoor natural light without competing with the bride.
See Lisa and Brandon’s Old Christ Church Wedding →
Sage Strapless Sweetheart Floor-Length Gowns

A candid photo of four bridesmaids genuinely cracking up is worth more than a staged lineup shot, and this Ojai wedding at Meditation Mountain delivered. The sage strapless sweetheart gowns have a ruched gathered bodice and soft chiffon skirt in a classic silhouette that reads timeless in photos. The minimalist white interior with the shoji screen behind them is very Ojai, very zen, very good.
See Lindsey and Eric’s Ojai Wedding →
Pale Mint Convertible Floor-Length Gowns

Convertible bridesmaid dresses let each person wear the style they’re most comfortable in, all in the same fabric and shade. At this South Wind Ranch wedding in Tennessee, six bridesmaids wore a pale mint chiffon in their own configurations, from wrap to one-shoulder to halter. It’s the lightest shade on this list, hovering somewhere between mint and seafoam, and it pairs beautifully with the soft blush and white rose bouquets they carried.
See Madeline and Cooper’s Tennessee Ranch Wedding →
Blue-Green Mismatched Boho Floor-Length Gowns


If you love green but don’t want to commit to a single shade, a blue-green palette mix is a genuinely beautiful solution. This boho Austin wedding paired 8 bridesmaids in mismatched floor-length gowns across a range of sage, dusty teal, steel blue, and slate tones. The hanger shot shows the full range together, which is a great way to visualize how these shades blend before committing to the final color run. It reads earthy and romantic in person, and cohesive in photos.
See Dusti and Will’s Austin Boho Wedding →
FAQs
What shade of green bridesmaid dress photographs best?
Deep hunter and forest greens tend to be the most reliable for photography because the color reads clearly in any light, indoors and out. Sage and mint can look slightly washed out in direct midday sun but are gorgeous in shade and at golden hour. Olive works beautifully in fall natural light but can look murky under warm indoor venue lighting. The short version: talk to your photographer about your venue’s lighting before finalizing the shade.
Can bridesmaids wear mismatched green dresses?
Yes, and it tends to look intentional when done in one of two ways: the same shade in different silhouettes, or a palette of related shades in the same silhouette. The first option (one color, varied styles) works best when the color is distinctive enough to hold the look together, like a deep emerald or hunter green. The second option (multiple shades, same cut) works when the range is narrow, say sage through mint, not sage through teal.
What flowers go well with green bridesmaid dresses?
White and blush bouquets are the most versatile pairing across every shade of green. For sage and mint, soft peach and ivory roses look especially romantic. For hunter and emerald green, white or deep burgundy bouquets add contrast. Sunflowers work beautifully with olive green for fall weddings. Tropical whites, like orchids and anthuriums, pair well with emerald for a resort or botanical garden setting.
Is green a good color for bridesmaids in winter?
Hunter and forest green are particularly strong for winter weddings. The deep tone works with heavy fabrics like velvet and satin, and the color holds up well against winter foliage and indoor candlelight. Sage and mint lean more spring and summer, though they can work in winter if your venue has a lot of natural light or white surfaces to bounce it. The dress fabric matters too: a light chiffon in sage reads differently in December than a heavier crepe in the same shade.
What color does the bride wear with green bridesmaid dresses?
Ivory and white both work well, which is reassuring because that’s usually the plan anyway. Classic white creates a clean contrast against sage, hunter, or emerald. Ivory reads slightly warmer and tends to look particularly beautiful alongside olive and earthy greens. If the bride is wearing champagne or a soft blush, that also pairs nicely with the lighter sage and mint tones. What doesn’t work: the bride also wearing green, unless it’s a very deliberate fashion moment.
