Archive for the category ‘bicoastal bridesmaid’

Bicoastal Bridesmaid: Dress Shopping (Round 1)

By Hadley Hall Meares

http://www.flickr.com/photos/tineyho/ / CC BY-SA 2.0

For all you never-engaged readers out there (or you engaged but never made it that far in the planning, or you engaged but it was a shotgun wedding because baby was on its way…), have sympathy for your betrothed contemporaries. Wedding planning actually is a lot of work, and not just in Jennifer Lopez movies.

I was recently e-mailed a color-coded spreadsheet, as part of my maid-of-honor duties. On it was the potential guest list for Elise and Jeremy’s wedding, with a color assigned to Elise’s family, Jer’s family, Elise’s friends, Jer’s friends, Elise’s parents’ friends, Jer’s parents’ friends, Elise’s brother’s sig-other’s sister’s uncle, etc. etc. Next to each name was a check, an X, or a question mark.

My job was to look over the list and see if there was anyone I thought could be cut. Of course, I looked only at our mutual friends and decided that they should all be there and, in fact, more should be added. I also thought Jer should invite even more guys (he already invited a ton) of the single persuasion so us unattached ladies could have our choice for some end-of-the-night hotel shenanigans.

Clearly, I am not the best person to help whittle down a list.

You see, unlike me, Elise and Jeremy are classy and understated folk, and want their wedding to be a small, meaningful and intimate affair. On the other hand, I, who have rarely been to any kind of ceremony without a glass of champagne in one hand and in my younger days, a bottle of Drambuie (look it up, children), want it to be a huge party.

Unfortunately for Elise and Jer, his parents agree with me (in a way). They are New Yorkers and therefore want a big, opulent wedding with many guests — though I think their motives are to have everyone they love at the blessed event, instead of to have enough people to do the chicken dance with after.

(Disclaimer: Elise, in no way do I think you will allow and/or condone the chicken dance at your reception. If you choose not have it played, I will not in any way try to initiate either it or the Electric slide. Pinky swear.)

So, my more-the-merrier stance was not super helpful. Another big thing that happened was that Elise, Anne and Shields, my fellow bridesmaids, went bridesmaid dress shopping in Virginia and picked a dress. Elise asked me and Rosalina (who lives in Ohio) to try on the dress in our respective towns and tell her what we thought. She gave me the name of the designer and the style number and I set about calling around LA to see if any local bridal stores carried the dress.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/74983974@N00/ / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The first one who did was in Beverly Hills.

Yes, Beverly Hills. Ugh. Beverly Hills is my least favorite place on earth. For those of you who have never actually been to LA, Beverly Hills is not what you think it is. It is not filled with cool kids, like the ones from Clueless, or with amazing bikinis that awe teenage boys like in Mighty Ducks II, or with hip-rocking movie stars — unless they are over the age of 70.

Beverly Hills is filled with very old, very rich people, or people who want you to know they are rich. They drive very slow, the streets are super-confusing and everything seems faded and sad with dingy beige columns and little yippy dogs.

After sitting in traffic for an hour on Rodeo, I get to the store, which feels like a silent white mausoleum, empty save a few sequined dresses, and a very severe-looking high-fashion sales lady with long brown hair and some ash-grey afghan artfully thrown around her shoulders.

She greeted me warily, I stuttered something about my friend wanting me to try on a certain style of dress (Elise suggested I say it wasn’t the definite dress so that I didn’t get the hard sale). She sighed and said she remembered talking to me, and took me upstairs to the equally deserted fitting area.

Bridal Party Rule #2: When trying on dresses always play DUMB.

Since so many people are bicoastal, and because the internet has stolen so much business, bridal stores get really tired of people coming in, trying on dresses, and then ordering them from somewhere else. After hearing about my long-distance status, my lady flat out asked me if I would be buying it online. I told her oh no, as soon as Elise made her final decision, I would probably buy it from her (LIE: we are getting them at cost through Elise’s mother-in-law), so they could do alterations, and by the way, could I have her card.

You should have seen how her attitude changed. All the sudden she was searching through the racks with vigor, looking for the dress (stores often use a different numbering system than the designer, so it is a good idea to have a print-out picture of the dress).

I’m not even sure if she believed me, but just the fact that I validated her job, seemed to make her relax and she opened up, talking about her own upcoming wedding and other pleasant trifles. She found the dress, a beautiful, floor length strapless empire-waist chiffon, although she didn’t have it in navy, the correct color, only a very flattering sage green.

After a few minutes struggling to get my gynormous boobs squished into one of the stores strapless corsets, I finally pulled on the dress. I was overwhelmed. I looked LIKE AN ADULT. I had been a bridesmaid once before, but I was only 22, and we wore short J-Crew 50’s type dresses. This dress, and my new cut bob hair cut, made me look like a woman. A woman whose best friend was getting married, a woman who was twenty-freaking-seven years old, a woman who could not screw this role up.

Helpful hint #2: Bring some tissues into the dressing room, so you don’t get snot all over the sample dress.

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Bicoastal Bridesmaid: The Introduction

By Hadley Hall Meares
Bridal Clips

Image by LexnGer via Flickr

Bridal Party rule #1: The maid-of honor is NOT supposed to try on veils when dress shopping for the bride. It will cause the rest of the party to scream at said maid-of-honor, who will be very glad she is wearing a blusher so that she can hide her burning cheeks behind it. Not that the maid-of-honor will know that’s what the pretty gauzy veil pulled over the face is called, until schooled by the bride.

And the tipsy sales lady.

Who is that clueless maid-of-honor? That’s me. But I plead distance… loooooong distance. 2,555 miles to be exact.

You see, I live in Los Angeles, home of the swinger, where most people don’t get married till 35 and undying devotion until then is usually reserved for little dogs and one’s acting school. My best friend, Elise, lives in Charlottesville, the elegant home of Jefferson and the Wahoos of UVA. It’s the land of rolling green hills and professors with Co-op memberships.

Elise and I met during our freshman year of college at Hollins University. Hollins is an all girls school with excellent academics and even better traditions, all of which seem to involve a bottle of Champagne in one hand and a ridiculous costume being held up by the other.

We were both unformed girls from small college towns and we became fast friends and soon roommates. Our shared love of gossiping in the cafeteria for hours, murder mysteries, rubbing each other’s heads, and being know-it-alls in our respective areas of interest (hers were the sciences-particularly biology, and mine were the arts) sealed the deal.
Over the years, I became Elise’s unsolicited consultant when it came to boyfriends. I was, to put it nicely, terrified of relationships and all for the casual. Elise, on the other hand, was a nurturer who took care of her boyfriends with the same kind firmness with which she took care of me. I stuck my nose in her business and she made sure I made it to my own bed at the end of the night.

Let’s just say I was the wilder of the two.

Once we graduated we kept our friendship up, talking on the phone almost every day, even though I moved to LA to pursue a career in the arts. Elise had numerous adventures, getting her master’s degree in Australia, traveling the world, working in the sciences.

We would visit each other often, and somewhere in that timeframe Elise met her fiancé Jeremy, a terrific med student with a wicked sense of humor and a heart as giving as Elise’s.

He proposed to her, she said yes, and here we are.

Emails flow constantly, I try and give my opinion on venues and dresses and colors, but really I don’t have a clue. I think everything is pretty, everything sounds like the best (I am an actress after all). I’ve realized the most important thing you can do is be there, even if all you are saying is: “Whatever you think is best.”

What bride doesn’t want to hear that?

Over Christmas break, I went home to NC and we went dress shopping with our friends Savon and Rosalina. I laughed when we had to sneak photos of the dresses with Savon’s cell phone. I teared up when I saw Elise beaming and radiant in one particular gown before making another faux pas–  flouncing her train while the sales lady swayed idly by.

So this is my blog, all about trying to be the best maid-of-honor I can be, even if it is over the wires. The wedding is in eight months, and I’ll be posting from time to time, sharing little wisdoms, but hopefully lots of laughs.

I will round out each post with a little tip and this one is courtesy of my friend, Savon.

Other maids-of-honor, you are welcome to use it and seem like the most helpful girl in the room:

You cannot get Tulips in the fall.


hadleyHadley Hall Meares is named after Ernest Hemingway’s first wife. Like those lost generation expats this 20-something has had a varied and highly amusing life. She was born in Chapel Hill, NC, to liberal, preppy hippies and grew up singing, acting, writing and watching lots of college basketball. She now does the first three professionally and would like to marry someone who coaches the fourth. Hadley then attended Hollins University, where she studied art and film history, writing, and partying in pearls and a trucker hat. Hadley studied abroad in London, worked in New York, Charleston and LA and has written for several online publications including Ostrich Ink and Quintessentially Magazine.

After graduating cum nothing from Hollins, Hadley traveled cross country, got chased by a man with a gun, and settled in Los Angeles to pursue her love of storytelling. Her fiction has been published in the Santa Monica Review and the Southern Indiana Review, and she recently completed her first novel, Absolutely. She has played Henry V on stage, been a featured performer at the legendary Dresden (fulfilling her long held wish to be lounge singer) and only drinks champagne.

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