One of the original inspirations for this blog was Jassy in The Pursuit of Love worrying about her sister’s wedding-dress, short ‘as was the hideous fashion’ - she is concerned that Louisa will be buried in her dress, and the undertakers will have to look at her ‘poor old dead legs.’ So we’ve always taken our wedding dresses seriously.
This is my favourite of all the dresses ever featured:
...and here is part of the blogpost:
In Samuel Richardson’s early novel Pamela (1740) the heroine holds out for marriage and gets it (against considerable odds, like some early Bridget Jones), but she seems to get married, rather surprisingly, in ‘a rich white satin night-gown, that had been my good lady's, and my best head-clothes’, so that the servants won’t guess what’s going on.
Jane Austen’s books all end in weddings, but there is very little detail of the ceremonies, apart from Mrs Elton’s bitchy description of Emma’s nuptials as being shabby and inferior to her own: ‘very little white satin, very few lace veils; a most pitiful business!’ Mrs Bennett in Pride & Prejudice suggests that Lydia should not wait to have her wedding clothes (whole trousseau rather than just gown) made, but should get on with getting married – well, yes, she’s living in sin, on the edge of social doom.
Is the most famous wedding in literature the one that doesn’t take place? Jane Eyre is set to marry Mr Rochester wearing pearl-grey silk – she has insisted on plainness, but as an alternative to bright colours, not to white. He gives her a beautiful, elaborate veil, but that is destroyed by the woman from the attic. We all know this story all too well, but the scene where Bertha comes and tries on the veil is bone-chilling – the more so because we feel such pity for her, though no-one in the book seems to.
At the beginning of Mrs Gaskell’s North and South (1854-55), Margaret Hale helps with the preparations for her cousin’s wedding – as a guest she wears white satin, which 100 years later would have been very bad form. She also has some modern-sounding views: fed up with all the jobs for the girlish Bridezilla Edith, she says her own choice would be ‘to walk to church through the shade of trees; and not to have so many bridesmaids, and to have no wedding-breakfast’.
In the 19th century a new dress might be obtained for the wedding, but it is not necessarily white, and it will be used again - and plenty of women just wore their best dress, perhaps with a veil. The tradition for white seems to have started with the weddings of Queen Victoria and then her daughters, but took a long time to catch on. The one-off wedding dress is a 20th century invention, and even then, as you can find in Nancy Mitford and Somerset Maugham, a new bride was expected to wear her wedding-dress to her first dinner-parties.
The main complaint from readers of the piece was that there was no Miss Havisham – too sad, I thought. But there must be plenty of fictional weddings not yet covered on the blog, and I look forward to many more entries, and some same-sex weddings in books.
Some of our best wedding photos have come from Perry Photography, including two of those above, and they are used with her kind permission: you can see more of her pictures at Flickr, or at her website weddingsinitalytuscany. Her wonderful photos have featured on the blog many times before.
Moira - Lovely blog post! What I love about wedding dresses is that, among other things, they reflect the wearer's era, taste and a lot of other things too. You can learn so much just from knowing what sort of gown the wearer chose. And I have to say, I thought of Miss Havisham too...
ReplyDeleteThanks Margot - yes, they are real cultural indicators aren't they? As well as a joy to look at, and fun to research and find pictures. I can see I am going to have to do a blogpost on Miss H sooner or later....
DeleteI have already noted my dislike for for weddings. I do remember fondly the wedding dress my mother made me for my first wedding (because she made it). White velveteen, short, lovely but on the plain side. And she made the two bridesmaid's dresses which were similar. A small wedding in a small church in Alabama. My second marriage ceremony was in the judge's chambers in California, with two witnesses we had known only one month. They took us to a lovely restaurant for brunch and we went home. Makes me nostalgic thinking about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that Tracy, they both sound like nice events. It's good you have fond memories.
DeleteHaven't come across too many weddings in my reading - Havisham springs to mind. Not much else.
ReplyDeleteI remember my own wedding well, but not my dress! Only my wife and myself and a few witnesses that we didn't know....Seychelles 1988.
Oh lucky you! The thing is, do you remember what your wife's dress looked like?
DeleteI have a colour copy of the pair of us on my desk at work - as last year when it was our 25th - my daughter who works with me took a family photo from home and replicated it at work and decorated my desk with it. I have it pinned up in my workstation.
DeleteIt's a delicate pale pink, sleeveless with lace attachment that covers part of my wife's upper arms. It has a ruched effect at the bottom and finishes just above the ankles or mid-calf. No train, no veil. I think my wife and her mother made it between them. It's very fetching. (I'll scan you a copy, if you promise not to publish it!)
Very impressed by your detailed fashion description - I knew you had a Clothes in Books side hidden away. What a nice thing for your daughter to do.
DeleteI've posted a comment on the Guardian books blog, about Laura Ingalls Wilder's (black cashmere) wedding dress, described in great detail in "These Happy Golden Years" - then thought that I could recommend the "Little House" series of books more generally to this blog for their very detailed and evocative descriptions of clothes - my favourite bit about them!
ReplyDeleteYes, I'm definitely going to have to check out the books (which I haven't looked at since my daughter was young) and especially the black cashmere wedding dress - how very unusual!
Delete