Showing 113–120 of 410 results
Hand Embroidered Red Floral Ball Gown
Thousands of tiny hand-embroidered flowers trail down this ball gown like they’ve been growing there for generations. The craftsmanship is the kind you only notice when it feels *too perfect* to be mass-produced — because it isn’t. Every detail on this dress whispers “hours of work,” and frankly, it shows (and gloats a little, as it should).
The shape? Classic ball gown. The color? A rich, unapologetic red that doesn’t need your blessing to walk down the aisle. It’s the kind of dress that doesn’t *ask* for attention — it quietly assumes it, with the confidence of a queen who’s already ruled several empires. Combine that with layers of soft, voluminous tulle and a silhouette that floats more than walks, and you’ve got ceremony-level drama baked right in.
So if you’re planning your wedding entrance like it’s a cinematic reveal (as you should), this is your moment. Not everyone can pull off a red floral ball gown. But if you’re even *thinking* about it, you already can.
Hand-Drawn Palm Signature Print
Hand-drawn in delicate ink with a flair for beachy understatement, this palm tree signature print trades acorns and woodland vibes for gentle fronds and shoreline charm. No leaves to glue, no wood to engrave—just a graceful canopy ready to be filled with handwritten notes that sway more emotionally than actual palm branches in a breeze.
It’s minimalist, but not in a “forgot to decorate” kind of way. More in the “yes, we do yoga but also pay our taxes” kind of way. Printed on high-quality matte stock, it’s designed to live on your wall, not your shelf of forgotten wedding things next to the dried bouquet and the napkin with wine ring art. Guests sign right around the tree — no thumbprint smudging, no puzzle assembly, and no one asking, “Where do I write?”
This one’s for the couple whose wedding playlist includes steel drums but also Bon Iver. Artful, intentional, and just a little breezy in the best way, it’s the kind of guest book alternative that quietly says, “We got married, and we didn’t lose our aesthetic doing it.”
Ivory Boho Lace Jumpsuit
Hand-cut vintage lace and a barely-there ivory lining—this jumpsuit doesn’t just flirt with the idea of bridal; it full-on elopes with it in a field of wildflowers. It’s the kind of piece that looks like you styled it with soft curls and a breeze, even if you’re standing in front of city hall with a coffee in hand. We’re talking full boho energy, without the commitment to questionable flower crowns.
The wide-leg pants add that poetic drama (read: you *will* swish elegantly down the aisle), while the delicate lace keeps things soft and romantic instead of veering into costume territory. No zippers disguised as corsets, no drama with boning or corsetry—it just slips on and makes you look like the laidback icon you are. If you’re the kind of bride who prefers string lights to chandeliers and wants to feel her legs again post-ceremony, this is your move.
Lace Bodice Bridal Jumpsuit
Tailored crepe pants meet a scalloped lace bodice, and yes — it’s as good as it sounds. The Lace Bodice Bridal Jumpsuit balances softness and structure like that one friend who organizes the bachelorette weekend and still finds time to knit you a bridal clutch. The delicate lace up top keeps things romantic, while the sleek, high-waisted leg gives the whole look ‘Power Bride’ energy.
There’s no train to wrangle, no veil to trip over — just you, your great taste, and a jumpsuit that actually lets you sit cross-legged without panicking. It’s ideal for brides who’d rather major in style and minor in tradition. Wear it down the aisle, to the courthouse, or as a reception switch-up when you’re done with the whole “gown and go” thing.
This is the outfit that lets you hug your nana *and* hit the dance floor like you choreographed the flash mob yourself. Comfortable. Chic. And absolutely still bridal – just with a better hemline for doing the worm.
Maple Tree Puzzle Guestbook
Each maple leaf puzzle piece is individually cut — not randomly, not generically, but with enough precision that your guests may spend a suspicious amount of time picking “the right one” to sign. It’s a puzzle guestbook, yes, but it’s also a metaphor wearing woodgrain: every friend and family member is a literal piece of the tree.
Once assembled, it forms a blooming maple with a customized center — your names, your date, or a dramatic flourish like “It all started with brunch.” (Your call.) Unlike the usual spiral-bound book that lives next to expired printer ink and loose batteries, this one is display-worthy from day one. Bonus: putting it together later is its own little post-honeymoon date night. Sentiment with something to *do*? Rare.
This isn’t just keepsake territory — it’s interaction disguised as décor. Guests leave their scribbles, you end up with a tree of thoughts that doubles as wall art, and nobody’s signature disappears into a page no one ever turns. It’s sweet, symbolic, and just tactile enough to make Grandma ask if she’s allowed to keep a piece. (She’s not. Stay vigilant.)
Personalized Sunflower Canvas Guest Book
Sunflowers bloom across the top of this guest book canvas like it’s been plucked straight from a storybook… or a very aesthetically committed field. The personalized names and date are subtly nestled beneath the floral fanfare—no neon fonts, no bad frame jokes—just a clean, romantic layout that does exactly what it’s supposed to: make you look good in front of your guests.
Each guest leaves their signature directly on the canvas, turning your love story into a sunflower-studded artifact instead of a spiral-bound regret. Bonus: it’s canvas, not paper, so it won’t fade the second someone forgets a coaster at the reception. Hang it at home as a sweet reminder that people showed up, wrote things, and didn’t just ghost your open bar. It’s heartfelt without being heavy-handed—sentiment with actual design taste, which, let’s be honest, is harder to find than seating chart peace.
Plus Size Green Embroidered Gown
Floral embroidery crawls up sage green tulle like something out of a fairytale fever dream—and honestly, we’re not mad about it. This plus-size gown doesn’t just show up, it *arrives*, complete with sheer sleeves and a bodice that looks like it was stitched together by woodland sprites with strong opinions on symmetry.
The full skirt gives you movement without the drama of a train (translation: you won’t need a designated wrangler), and the soft A-line fit means you can float across the vineyard/lawn/moss-covered forest floor with equal grace. It’s unapologetically feminine without tipping into cupcake territory—a rare feat in embroidery land.
If you’re going to skip the white dress, go all in on the drama. This one doesn’t just *allow* for a non-traditional moment—it practically dares you to have one. Bonus: it treats curves like a feature, not an afterthought.
Raspberry Tulle Gown With Detachable Train
Layers of raspberry tulle float dramatically behind you in a detachable train that dares to whisper, “I could leave at any moment — and still be iconic.” Flexible drama, if you will. Slip it off post-ceremony and suddenly you’re the cool bride who doesn’t need an entourage to carry her hemline through cocktail hour.
The gown itself is peak softness-meets-theatrics: a delicate silhouette that flatters without trying too hard, wrapped in that deep, not-quite-red raspberry hue — bold, but not shouty. It’s the kind of gown that understands you want to serve romance but still have room to breathe (and maybe sneak fries between champagne toasts). This isn’t just a dress — it’s an entrance, an exit, and a subtle mic drop.
If you’ve ever felt torn between “breathtaking fairytale” and “practical genius,” congratulations. You’ve found the only gown that does both — and looks devastatingly good doing it.
