Showing 9–16 of 56 results
Brocade Strapless Ball Gown
Brocade isn’t usually the fabric of understatement, and that’s exactly the point. This strapless ball gown leans all the way in with blue floral brocade that looks like it was yanked right off a porcelain vase—in the best way. The fabric has enough weight to feel structured (read: it won’t flop around during your first twirl as a newly re-wed), but still moves like it belongs at a candlelit reception under chandeliers.
The silhouette brings major ceremony energy: strapless sweetheart neckline, full ballgown skirt, nipped-in waist. Classic, but with just enough twist to feel like a glow-up, not a do-over. And the blue floral print? It’s bold but still bridal-adjacent, especially if you’re stepping away from the stark white aisle this time around. Perfect for a formal affair or even a wildly romantic garden wedding where tradition gets gently side-eyed. This is what happens when you know what works for you—and have no time left for bridal guesswork.
Champagne Lace Wedding Dress
The lace on this gown doesn’t just skim the silhouette — it climbs delicately over a champagne underlayer that’s doing a lot more than fading into the background. The color is technically “diamond white/champagne,” which sounds fussy, but actually translates to “bridal without the bridal baggage.” Translation: it gives you the softness of tradition without pretending you’re brand new to nuptials.
The sheer lace bodice blends seamlessly into illusion straps (read: support without looking like it’s trying), while subtle sequins do just enough shimmering to look intentional — not like you ran into a glitter bomb on the way in. The sheath cut keeps things streamlined, while the floor-length hem balances elegance with ease. You won’t need five bridesmaids to help you pee in this one. That’s progress.
Whether you’re exchanging vows in a sun-drenched garden or walking yourself down the aisle in a city loft, this dress works. It’s romantic, grown-up, and unapologetically beautiful — just like the reason you’re tying the knot again in the first place.
Cloudy Blue Lace Tulle Gown
Cloudy blue tulle and an off-the-shoulder neckline—subtle moves, major effect. This gown doesn’t scream for attention, but it won’t be forgotten either. The chapel train trails gracefully without going full royal procession, while the structured bodice keeps everything in place (read: no fidgeting during vows or cake-cutting). And that color? It’s the visual equivalent of exhaling, equal parts romantic and unexpected.
The lace appliqué is placed with purpose, sweeping just enough across the bodice and skirt to catch the light without looking like a craft store explosion. It’s dreamy, yes—but grounded in grown-woman polish. You’re not here to cosplay your first wedding. You’re here to feel beautiful, be comfortable, and remind yourself (and everyone else) that doing it again doesn’t mean dialing it down. This is “something blue” reimagined—more soul, less symbolism.
Diamond White Champagne Lace Gown
Diamond white over a champagne lining sounds like a subtle detail — until you see how it handles sunlight. Suddenly, this lace gown becomes a masterclass in depth and glow, with just enough contrast to suggest complexity. (Which, coincidentally, is how most second weddings go, too.)
The silhouette is A-line and floor-length, with a sweep train that behaves elegantly without sabotaging your stride. It’s lace-heavy, sure, but not the itchy kind — this is soft, structured, and skimming in all the right places. The V-neck flatters without plunging, and the back dips just enough to keep things interesting from all angles. There’s a zipper back, yes, but it’s camouflaged with a row of delicate buttons — you’ll look effortlessly pulled together without requiring a full pit crew to get dressed.
This is not the “reinvent yourself in 14 layers of tulle” dress. It’s the “I know what I like” dress. Comfortable, classic, and just detailed enough to say: I’ve done this before — and this time, I’m enjoying every second of it.
Diamond White Pant Lace Gown
Diamond white lace with a floor-length chiffon skirt — the kind of combination that says bridal, but doesn’t shout about it. The *Florine* gown is technically a dress, but functionally a sigh of relief: soft, flattering, and entirely free of corsetry or drama. It’s made for the second-time bride who’s not interested in reenacting a tiara-heavy rom-com, but still wants a dress that feels purposeful and just a touch romantic. Bonus: the V-neck is just deep enough to flatter, not fumble.
The lace bodice provides texture up top, while floaty chiffon takes care of the rest — especially if the words “comfortable” and “elegant” are both on your dress checklist. There’s no train trailing behind to trip over, and no stiff boning to remind you of your last dress-shopping trauma. Wear it to a garden ceremony, a lakeside vow renewal, or an intimate dinner celebration that ends with cake and real conversations. It’s a dress that works — literally and metaphorically — because you already know what doesn’t.
Gothic Lace Chapel Train Gown
The lace pattern on this chapel train gown? Surprisingly gothic—think delicate spiderwebs spun from ivory thread. It’s a full-length moment that looks like it got lost on the way to a Victorian cathedral, but made a superb detour through modern bridal elegance. The oversized floral appliqué adds depth, drama, and the kind of texture that makes guests lean in. Oh, and about that train: it’s just long enough to declare, *yes, I still do entrances*. But without the tripping hazard.
This gown trades bridal clichés for something a little bolder—a soft A-line silhouette, sheer long sleeves, and a hint of high-collar romance that says, “I know exactly what I’m doing (and who I’m marrying).” It’s not interested in playing debutante. It’s here for tall candles, moody florals, and a second wedding that looks nothing like the first. You’ve evolved. Your taste has too. This gown keeps the lace, ditches the frills, and meets you right where you are—in style and in life.
Halter Lace A Line Gown
Boning in the bodice. That’s the quiet hero of this halter lace A-line gown — giving you structure where it counts so you can breathe freely everywhere else. Unlike some wedding dresses that treat “support” as a mythical concept, this one understands that a grown woman deserves a bit more engineering. Add to that a halter neckline that flatters the shoulders (especially if you’ve put in a few hours with pilates or toddlers), and you’ve got a gown that balances classic bridal with no-nonsense wearability.
The all-over lace keeps things romantic, but without the frill overload — picture clean lines, just enough texture, and a silhouette that knows how to move with you, not against you. Floor-length with zero frothy fluff, it’s ideal for a second wedding that doesn’t require a cathedral train to feel momentous. Garden-ready, reception-tested, and dateless in the best way (trend-proof, not dateless on the calendar). It’s bridal, reimagined — thoughtful where it matters, effortless everywhere else.
High-Neck Lace Trumpet Gown
A high neckline, full lace overlay, and a trumpet silhouette that hugs and flares in all the right places — this gown doesn’t shy away from formality, it perfects it. The court-length train adds just enough ceremony to say “yes, this is still a wedding,” while the high-neck lace bodice keeps things polished without tipping over into stuffy. Bonus: every inch of this dress is covered in thoughtfully placed lace that looks more heirloom than doily.
This is for the second-time bride who’s not arriving with a dramatic veil lift or a castle ceremony, but still wants the entrance to feel like a moment. The fitted shape emphasizes exactly what you want it to and the high-neck detail adds an air of command (without sacrificing romance). Planning a more classic venue — like a historic estate or an elegant evening ceremony? This one’s got main-aisle energy without pretending it’s your bridal debut.
