Showing 457–464 of 1858 results
Green Floral Chiffon Ball Gown
Layers of deep green chiffon, oversized floral print, and unapologetic drama—this ball gown is *not* here to play subtle. The full skirt swishes like a fairytale come to life, only this time, the princess picked leaves and blooms over pearls and tiaras. And frankly, good choice.
The structured bodice balances out all that airy movement, giving just enough cinch to hold the fantasy together while you glide (read: march confidently) down the aisle. It’s romantic, sweeping, and absolutely impossible to forget—which feels appropriate, considering the whole lifelong-vow thing happening. This isn’t a “maybe someday again” dress. It’s a main-character moment in deep green and floral print. Wear it like you mean it.
Green Off-Shoulder Tulle Gown
Off-the-shoulder tulle with a full ball skirt—yes, it’s giving dramatic Juliet energy, minus the tragic ending. The neckline’s sweep is soft, romantic, and just structured enough to stay put while you dance, toast, and accidentally weep at your own vows. All that layered green tulle? A shade that walks the fine line between “woodland fairy” and “scene-stealing queen,” which, frankly, is exactly the goal.
This gown doesn’t rely on sequins or over-the-top embellishments to make its point. The point is clear: elegance can have an edge, and green doesn’t mean garden party unless *you* say it does. It’s the kind of dress that suggests you wandered out of an enchanted forest…and took command of a castle on the way. Call it bridal maximalism with better taste.
Green One Shoulder Floral Embroidered Gown
One shoulder, all drama — this sage green gown leans hard into asymmetry with a bold sweeping neckline that somehow feels both classical and rebellious. The floral embroidery? It doesn’t just sit there, it climbs, spirals, and thrives across the bodice like a greenhouse that knows its angles. And that fitted waist cascading into a slightly flared skirt? Pure movement, like you just stepped out of a slow-motion bridal fantasy (but the kind with your playlist, not Pachelbel’s Canon).
It’s the kind of dress that does exactly what it says on the tin — own-the-room energy without trying too hard. Sage keeps it soft, the one-shoulder cut tips it into modern, and the floral detailing makes it wedding without being obvious about it. If you’re walking into your big day with a “yes I’m wearing green, no I don’t need a crown” vibe, this gown has you covered — literally, but not predictably.
Hand Beaded 3D Floral Gown
Hundreds of hand-sewn 3D floral appliqués on a slate green base—less “borrowed from nature,” more “went out and stole the whole garden.” This gown doesn’t whisper romance; it composes sonnets and flings them off balconies. Each bloom is individually beaded, which feels wildly indulgent until you’re standing under twinkle lights and someone audibly gasps. Then it just feels correct.
Beyond the embroidery flex, the silhouette means business: the elbow-length sleeves and elongated A-line offer structure without sacrificing softness. It moves like mist on a lake, but with the quiet authority of a woman who had taste before *Cottagecore* and will still have it after. The slate green shade is refreshingly serious—not sage, not mint, not trying too hard—which makes it that rarest of wedding dress colors: elegant, memorable, and impossible to eye-roll.
If you’re aiming for ethereal but want to keep one foot on the ground, this dress plays the line beautifully. It’s giving “I belong in a Turner painting,” but she also brought snacks and doesn’t mind leading the conga line. A ceremony dress for the modern-day mythical creature with a calendar and a sense of humor.
Hand Beaded Jade Godet Gown
The jade tone isn’t subtle—it’s intentional. Like someone looked at a forest and said, “More glam, less dirt.” Cue: this Hand Beaded Jade Godet Gown. Every inch is covered in delicate beadwork that actually looks like it took time (because it did), and the godet panels in the skirt add that flared-out elegance that makes walking feel like floating. No stiff crinoline. No bridal drama. Just fluid movement and beads that catch light like they’re on payroll.
Yes, it has sleeves—short ones, thank you very much—which makes it both formal and breathable. That combo is weirdly rare in wedding dresses that aren’t pure minimalist silk or medieval cosplay. The beading spirals into soft floral bursts, not a sequin overload, so you get shimmer without sparkle fatigue. This dress says “I own this aisle” without screaming it—and in a color that feels timeless if you pretend emerald got a degree in fine arts. Perfect for a wedding that’s high on mood and low on clichés.
Hand Drawn Oak Fingerprint Tree
The trunk of this oak tree was hand-drawn by an actual human, not a brush-wielding algorithm—and it shows. Every branch has that slight organic wobble that lets you know someone with a steady hand and a good pen made it, not someone halfway through a Canva tutorial. It’s quiet. It’s minimal. And it’s just begging for your guests’ fingerprints to turn it into an accidental masterpiece.
Instead of the usual guest book you’ll flip through once before losing it to a drawer full of pre-wedding chaos, this one becomes art—personal, touchable, wall-hangable art. Friends and family leave thumbprints in place of leaves, and the final look is half botanical print, half memory map. It’s the kind of thing that looks good in a frame, not just “for something you did once at your wedding.” And yes, the ink smudges are part of the charm. So is the fact that you can customize the names and wedding date underneath without resorting to a gaudy font.
Perfect for couples leaning timeless over trendy, oak over glitter, and “let’s hang this in the living room” over “where did we put that tan leather guestbook again?” This one gets more sentimental the longer it stays up. And yes, those thumbprints will eventually make you cry a little. In a good way.
Hand Embroidered Green Tulle Gown
Seven layers of soft green tulle, each hand-cut and stitched with embroidered florals that look like they wandered straight out of a Renaissance garden party. And no, “hand-embroidered” doesn’t mean a few token threads—this dress is one giant love letter to obsessive attention to detail, stitched by actual humans with soft lighting, patience, and probably a really good audiobook.
The silhouette is floaty but deliberate—cinched at the bodice to remind everyone you have a waist, then easing into a full, sweeping skirt that gives just the right amount of drama without tripping over itself. This is the kind of gown you wear if ethereal is your vibe but you’d like to keep one foot in reality (specifically, the kind that dances and then eats cake). Perfect for forest elopements, garden “I dos,” or any ceremony where you plan to make an entrance that’s more nymph than bride.
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.
