A royal wedding wouldn't be complete without a princess-worthy wedding gown. And while Kate Middleton's Alexander McQueen confection is a look we'll remember forever, we couldn't help but be swept away by the gown Princess Sofia donned to marry Prince Carl Philip of Sweden on Saturday. Sofia's dress was a custom creation by Swedish designer Ida Sjöstedt and featured delicate lace sleeves and a cascading train. Sofia topped her beautiful look with a shimmering tiara that was a gift from King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia. Read on to see her swoon-worthy look from every angle.
The stars strutted down the Tony Awards' red carpet on Sunday, including nominees who got an able assist from Vogue editor Anna Wintour, who a year ago proclaimed the annual event a fashion disaster in need of help.
No one look predominated. Hemlines and necklines varied. Colors ran the gamut from vivid reds, pinks and greens to neutral beige. Fabrics were alternately floral, solid or embossed, and there was a smattering of metallics.
"Heidi Chronicles" best actress nominee Elisabeth Moss chose a white, sleeveless Oscar de la Renta boldly embroidered with colorful flowers and vines in deep pink, yellow and green.
Patricia Clarkson, up for "The Elephant Man" opposite fellow nominee Bradley Cooper, also went sleeveless, in a black Alexander McQueen enlivened by huge deep red roses. "You look great!" enthused Wintour as they embraced.
On the red carpet outside Manhattan's Radio City Music Hall, bare shoulders trumped strapless looks, while the men mostly stuck to traditional tuxedos, some choosing a long tie over a bow tie.
Michael Cerveris, "Fun Home" nominee, sported an Armani tux but added his grandfather's tie bar.
For Broadway veteran Victoria Clark, nominated for a revival of "Gigi," the Wintour imprimatur was a godsend.
"I didn't have to worry about what to wear because I knew they were going to take care of it," said Clark, sporting a midnight blue gown with black lace top.
"Hand to God" best actor nominee Steven Boyer, wearing a Marc Jacobs tuxedo, cryptically observed, "There was a process" to being dressed and styled by Wintour and her minions.
Wintour, among the fashion world's most powerful and influential denizens, was brought in at the behest of Tony-winning costume designer and American Theater Wing head William Ivey Long, ostensibly to inject a bit of glamour to the annual Broadway event, which has traditionally been of more interest to theater fans than fashionistas.
The American Theater Wing is the creator of the Tonys.
The editor herself bucked the bare-shoulder trend in a dusty rose gown enlivened with sequins.
Newcomer Alexander Sharp, a favorite for best actor for the "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time," wore a cream-colored dinner jacket with plum-toned bow tie and dark trousers designed by Billy Reid.
"It's been fun to dress up - I'm not really used to all this," enthused the Broadway newcomer.
Helen Mirren, who won the best actress Tony for "The Audience," dazzled in a flowing, gauzy V-necked lace gown with an extra-long train, fitting given her role as Queen Elizabeth.
Kate Hudson's never met a romantic ivy number that she didn't just love (or look phenomenal wearing), but her glamorous Marchesa gown was even more bridal than ever. And while they too were nowhere near an aisle, Allison Williams and Olivia Wilde (in Dolce & Gabbana and Reem Acra, respectively) could've doubled as radiant brides-to-be.
These aren't the only ladies who've swapped wedding (or wedding-like) dresses for red carpet gowns—check out even more in the gallery below!
But it looks like the trend has evolved again with low-cut plunging tops showing off as much décolletage as possible being the 'in thing' this summer.
As always, the style is dictated by the trendy A-listers in the run-up to summer, with fans taking inspiration from the likes of Irina Shayk and Leonardo DiCaprio's rumoured girlfriend Toni Garrn.
And true to form the pair arrived at amfAR's Cinema Against Aids Gala - held at swanky Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc, near Cannes - in eye-wateringly low-cut dresses.
Newly-single Irina, who is thought to be dating Bradley Cooper after ditching Cristiano Ronaldo last year, certainly courted attention in her breast enhancing dress.
Supermodel Chanel Iman followed suit in a floor-length silver dress cut down to just millimetres above her bellybutton.
British beauty Lily Donaldson went for a simple yet mightily effective black frock with silver diamante edging cut very close to her chest.
Does this red carpet influx of plunging dresses and very dangerous necklines mean the era of Kardashian bum-skimming hemlines is in the past?
Is the rise of the 1960s mini skirt set to dive-bomb in favour of a more conservative length skirt? It would seem the A-list are in favour of this motion.
What's on the red carpet is usually reflected in the high street and you can bet your bottom dollar Topshop, River Island and the like will be snipping inches off their necklines in preparation for the summer.
Bold, brash and loud, Las Vegas is a city like no other. As you hit the famous Strip, you’ll be saluted by Captain Jack Sparrow, bump into Minnie Mouse and stroll past a replica of the Eiffel Tower. And that’s just for starters.
But there’s plenty on offer away from the bright lights and 24-hour casinos – from exquisite fine dining to relaxing spas and, in the surrounding areas, an abundance of natural beauty. No wonder A-list celebrities flock here and why America’s rock ’n’ roll king, Elvis Presley, was a huge fan.
So where to get started in Nevada’s wild child city? If you’re going to holiday in Vegas, blow the budget and opt for upscale accommodation. We checked into the super-classy Palazzo Hotel. This five-star, suite-only hotel has sumptuous super-sized beds and top-of-the-world city views, while the outdoor pool is the perfect place to kick back, relax and catch some serious rays away from the madding crowd.
If the roulette wheel and the blackjack table are not your bag, there’s fun to be found away from the slot machines. Billed as the entertainment capital of the world, Las Vegas attracts big names such as Elton John, Rod Stewart, Celine Dion and Britney Spears, who all perform regular concerts. And you can catch stand-up comedy performances, dance acts and theatrical shows, too.
A bucket-list must-see is the Cirque du Soleil show. There are eight different performances on The Strip, but the one that tops them all is the Michael Jackson ONE show at Mandalay Bay. To avoid disappointment, be sure to book your tickets in the UK before you go as these shows are often sold out (priced from £110 per person, for details see )
When it comes to retail therapy, Las Vegas gives New York a run for its money. Bargain hunters will love the two shopping outlets on either side of The Strip, selling popular labels such as Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Kate Spade and Nike, to name just a few.
It’s best to buy the American brands for great deals and remember to take an extra suitcase for your excess baggage!
To swat up on Las Vegas’s history and its ascent from small railroad town to modern day tourist mecca, head to the Springs Preserve. This is the birthplace of Las Vegas, the site of the natural springs where life first flourished in the desert, and visitors to the 180-acre cultural and historic attraction can learn all about the city’s rich heritage.
The Nevada State Railroad Museum, meanwhile, gives you the chance to ride an authentic train along the same tracks that once carried the cargo for the construction of Hoover Dam – the highest concrete dam in the Western Hemisphere and a National Historic Landmark.
And if you need a break from the bright lights, there’s plenty of natural beauty surrounding Sin City; the staggering Grand Canyon and Death Valley National Parks are all accessible by car. Nothing beats driving across the open roads of America in a Ford Mustang – and the good news is that car hire is extremely affordable in the US.
If you’re in need of some R&R after your exertions, head to the Vdara Hotel & Spa (vdara.com). Why not hire a cabana for the day and laze by the pool while being served cocktails on tap and food to order?
Make sure to visit the hotel’s ESPA branded spa for a seriously sumptuous treat. The On The Rocks massage, aptly named, is out of this world. Another noteworthy spa to chill out and be pampered in is Caesars Palace’s Qua Baths & Spa .
You might not think it, but Las Vegas is also a foodie hotspot with celebrity chefs including Gordon Ramsay, Joël Robuchon, Guy Savoy and Pierre Gagnaire all opening restaurants on The Strip.
If it’s an all-American experience you’re after head to Fix at the Bellagio for an upscale spin (bellagio.com/restaurants/fix.aspx). Menu highlights include lobster tacos and Bobby Baldwin burgers.
For a fine-dining experience, make a dinner date at DB Brasserie located at The Palazzo’s neighbouring hotel, The Venetian. Chef Daniel Boulud’s modern take on French cuisine is not to be missed. The restaurant, with its urban-cool vibe (leather seats, mood lighting and a buzzing atmosphere), also has a great cocktail happy hour, too.
Whatever your agenda, Las Vegas has something to offer. The only trouble you’ll have is cramming it all into one trip.
STARS have been wowing in dramatic dresses at the Cannes Film Festival for years, but one woman has a daring style track record like no other.
Meet Fan Bingbing, the Chinese actor who’s known for going big and bold on the red carpet — and nailing it every time.
The 33-year-old beauty, who stars in X-Men: Days of Future Past, arrived at the premiere of Mad Max in a floral Marchesa gown that might just be the most beautiful thing we’ve ever laid eyes on.
The flowing oyster grey frock featured sheer sleeves and was covered in 3D floral detailing in various shades of pastel.
The gorgeous star accessorised the dramatic design with a matching floral headpiece and a pair of diamond earrings.
On closer inspection, much of the intricate floral design is even made out of feathers and the floor length skirt includes layers and layers of fine bluish tulle.
It’s hardly surprising that Fan knocked it out of the park on this occasion. She glided down the Cannes red carpet for the opening ceremony and premiere of La Tete Haute(Standing Tall) two days prior, looking impossibly regal in Ralph & Russo Couture.
The Chinese beauty has been quietly topping best-dressed lists for a while now. The caped gold Christopher Bu dress that she wore to this year’s Met Gala was a standout.
Here are a few of Fan’s other red carpet looks over the years.
And here’s the jaw-dropping Marchesa gown from the back. We’re in love.
When Olivia Krieger went shopping for a wedding dress last July, she was only 15 years old.
No, there was no plan for her to become a child bride. She wasn’t even dating. But for Ms. Krieger, the ritual of trying on dresses in a bridal salon wasn’t about a relationship with a future spouse but about her relationship with her mother. And her mother, Lisa Krieger, had reached an advanced stage of terminal breast cancer. (This reporter learned of these events as a cousin of the Kriegers.)
“We weren’t sure how long we would have with her,” Olivia Krieger said of her mother, with whom she had enjoyed watching countless episodes of the television show “Say Yes to the Dress.” “She had the idea to do things while she still could, while she was still on her feet.”
And one of those things was to go wedding dress shopping with Olivia and her 19-year-old sister, Madeline. Or more accurately, Lisa Krieger wanted her daughters to have the opportunity to try on wedding dresses with her present, even though it meant acknowledging that it was likely to be their only opportunity.
“I was worried it would be a sad experience,” Madeline Krieger said. But instead it was a joyous one. There were toasts with sparkling cider and giddy smiles on July 28 as the two teenagers contemplated the elaborate dresses at Maria’s Bridal Couture in West Bloomfield, Mich. “They were almost magical,” said Olivia Krieger, who gravitated toward a Cristiano Lucci she described as “a princess gown,” while her sister favored a simpler silhouette.
But their favorite part was seeing their mother’s expression when she saw them in the dresses. “Her face just sort of lit up,” said Madeline Krieger, now a sophomore at Michigan State. “My mom won’t get to see Olivia graduate high school or see me graduate college, but she could do this.” Though Ms. Krieger doesn’t intend to get married anytime soon, she added, “When I do, I’ll be able to remember when I was 19 years old and my mom took me wedding dress shopping.”
“Lisa accepted life the way it was, rather than the way we wished it was,” Doug Krieger said of his wife, who died in October, three weeks after Olivia’s 16th birthday. “She showed the girls how you deal with a challenge in your life, no matter how small or how large. You focus on what you can do and not what you can’t.”
By doing so, Ms. Krieger was able to create a special moment with her daughters that they are likely to remember for the rest of their lives. Yet her choice was fairly unusual according to Dr. Karen Fasciano, a senior psychologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. “I’ve been doing psycho-oncology for 20 years, and I haven’t heard of a patient taking their unengaged daughter wedding dress shopping,” Dr. Fasciano said.
Megan Neforos hadn’t heard of it either, nor did she have any matrimonial prospects. But none of that stopped her from asking her mother, Joanne Ibbotson, to accompany her to Katherine’s Bridal Boutique in Alexandria, Va.
“I had a unique situation, because I had already lost a parent,” said Ms. Neforos, now 32 and a middle school counselor in Lincolnia, Va. Her father had died when she was 14, and she was 25 when her mother learned that she had ovarian cancer in November 2008.
“I kept asking ‘Why my mom?’ ” Ms. Neforos said. “My mom always said, ‘Why not me?’ ”
In August 2009, her mother’s oncologist told them there was nothing more he could do after only eight months of treatment. (“Below-the-belt cancers are deadly,” said Karen Bate, the spokeswoman for the Foundation for Women’s Cancer. Roughly 95,000 American women each year find out that they have gynecologic cancer, she said, and almost 30,000 die.)
“I can’t tell you how much we cried,” Ms. Neforos said. And as long as they were crying, she decided it was a good time to tell her mother she wanted to pick out a wedding gown with her.
Unlike the Kriegers, Ms. Neforos didn’t want to just try on dresses; she wanted to make an actual purchase. But her mother was too weak for any extended shopping, or even standing, so when she went to the bridal salon, it was only to see the one strapless Maggie Sottero gown that Ms. Neforos had picked out for her approval. And she definitely approved of how Ms. Neforos looked in the gown. There were tears in her eyes as she struggled to her feet and wordlessly embraced her daughter.
“I wanted to stay in that moment forever,” said Ms. Neforos, who was married three years later in the dress her late mother bought her and who is now a mother herself. But on that day in the bridal salon, she was reluctant to take off the dress because it was “the last time my mom would ever see me in it,” she said.
“There wasn’t a dry eye in the store,” said Katherine Gotsis, the salon owner. “In all the years I’ve been selling wedding gowns, I think hers was the most memorable.”
Not everyone responds as favorably. MaryAnne DiCanto, an 11-year breast cancer survivor in Amityville, N.Y., was disturbed by the negative reactions when she went wedding dress shopping with her daughter last November after learning her cancer had metastasized. “People thought I was being morbid,” said Ms. DiCanto, 56. “I thought I was being a realist.”
“People don’t know what to say,” Dr. Fasciano said. “They feel that being a cheerleader and saying you’re going to be fine is the most helpful, and often it’s not.”
Dr. Fasciano didn’t find anything morbid about shopping prematurely for bridal gowns. “If you do it in the right way, you’re helping your children grieve when you can’t be there,” she said. Still, she wasn’t completely sold on the idea and voiced concern about burdensome expectations that can come with “buying a wedding dress for a wedding that may or may not happen.”
However, making a purchase was not the objective for Ms. DiCanto and her 26-year-old daughter, Hilarie Williams, when they visited a David’s Bridal store in Massapequa, N.Y.
“I had just gotten out of a long relationship and had no plans for dating, let alone getting married,” said Ms. Williams, who described herself as more comfortable at horse stables than in bridal shops. But she enjoyed primping in the Zac Posen ball gowns, and her mother relished helping her into them.
“When she put on the veil, that’s when I got really emotional,” said Ms. DiCanto, whose own mother died of breast cancer in 1995. “I always imagined walking Hilarie down the aisle, and lifting the veil.”
Whether or not Ms. DiCanto does that, she felt she had done the next best thing, which was a common refrain among the mothers and daughters interviewed. So, too, was the notion of making the most of every day.
“Never wait,” said Mary Ann Wasil, also an 11-year breast cancer survivor experiencing a recurrence of the disease. “If something will bring you joy, then do it.”
Ms. Wasil, who lives in Milford, Conn., was 39 in 2004 and had three young children when she learned she had the disease. She told her children to tell anyone who asked that she was kicking cancer’s derrière (except she didn’t use as genteel a word as “derrière”). She went on to found the Get in Touch Foundation, a nonprofit organization that distributes educational tools for breast self-exams to teenagers in 32 countries.
Her middle child, Mary Nilan, described her mother, both a former Ford model and police officer, as irrepressibly positive. “If I hadn’t met her, if I just saw her from afar, I would say that woman is just one big ray of sunshine,” said Ms. Nilan, now 23.
It’s not that Ms. Wasil doesn’t admit to days when she gets in the shower and cries; her greatest fear is that she won’t be around when her children need her. But, she said, “I don’t want to miss out on the incredible moments I’m having right now because I’m sad about what might not be.”
With that in mind, in December 2013, Ms. Wasil took her daughters, Mary and Betsy Nilan, to try on dresses at the studio of her friend Victoria McMillan, a bridal designer in Babylon, N.Y. There was finger food and a bottle of Champagne. But mostly there were dozens of flowing white gowns with gossamer lace and shimmering silk.
“Just because my sister and I aren’t close to getting married didn’t mean we couldn’t have that special moment that every girl deserves with her mother,” Betsy Nilan, now 24, said.
Her sister said it more simply: “We had a blast.”
“This doesn’t have to be a sad story,” said Ms. Wasil, who recently started a more aggressive round of chemotherapy. “I know people who have so much more and are so miserable, and I just want to shake them and say: ‘How is this possible? Enjoy what you have.’ ”
I swear anything KT Merry points her camera at turns to instant wedding gold. My latest snippet of proof? This wine country dreamfest made gorgeous by A Savvy Event, Nancy Liu Chin, Julie Morgan, Artistry By Danika and so many more. Think the softest pink-on-pink color palette with a hint of ivory and mint mixed in for good measure. And from tasty libations to a dinner al fresco, Marmalade Sky Films proved that this is one celebration that spoiled guests from beginning to end.
From A Savvy Event … Stacy and Bill wanted a formal wedding with soft hues, a romantic vibe and–most importantly–an unforgettable setting. With a jewelry designer bride and a groom who works for Twitter, we knew we could also get away with incorporating some playful elements (think: succulents and sequined linens) into the design for their big day, while keeping their overall aesthetic pure and timeless. The couple chose Sonoma Golf Club as their venue, which proved the perfect setting for the soft and romantic feel they were seeking. Its cobblestone accents and merlot-hued shingles warmed their aesthetic even more by adding an element of unmistakable wine country charm.
We mixed dreamy blush tones with pops of greenery to create a cohesive and classic aesthetic. Blushes and ivories (hello, romance) were weaved throughout the ceremony in elements ranging from the flowers to the glassware to Stacy’s bridesmaids’ gowns, which were the perfect soft pink and Grecian-goddess gorgeous. Nancy Liu Chin created daydream-worthy floral arrangements that incorporated both whimsical flowers (peonies, roses and hydrangeas) and playful greenery (succulents and eucalyptus leaves). The ceremony took place on the lawn outside of the clubhouse at the base of a beautiful set of brick stairs, which we chose to frame with draped ivory curtains, plush greenery and–our favorite part–an absolute rock-star chandelier. Guests then dined Al Fresco on the lawn under string lights–an element that added an intimate and relaxed vibe to the day. Table elements included candlesticks in soft metallic pink (think: rosé), blush-hued glassware and log centerpieces chock-full of rich greenery and romantic flowers.
We brought in beautiful furnishings for the reception, ultimately creating a plush lounge area in the clubhouse. Guests finished out the night indoors with dancing (to the always-fun sounds of DJ Wayne), cocktails and late-night snacks. From statement chandeliers, to divine greenery and lavish floral arrangements, to a classic Sonoma setting, Stacy and Bill’s wedding was an event abundantly romantic, occasionally playful and ever charming.