Fairy Feather Accent

Fairy feather accent by Renee PaweleThe Fairy Feather Accent features layers of ostrich feathers in a puff to add to your gown, hairstyle, or hat.

This bridal feather accent is featured at The White Dress in Corona del Mar, California.

 


Erica Accent and Veil

Erica Headpiece by Renee PaweleThe Erica Headpiece and cage veil features layers of silver leaf applique beautifully embellished with Swarovski crystals that resembles a lace pattern accents with feathers and silver net. This piece works best as a side piece or angled with the net covering one brow.

This bridal headpiece and cage veil featured at The White Dress in Corona del Mar, California

 


Cecilia Bracelet

The Cecilia Bracelet  combines round filigree embellished with large freshwater pearls and Swarovski marquise rhinestones that secures with a magnet or an adjustable clasp.
This bracelet is featured at Kleinfeld Bridal Salon in New York,and The White Dress in Corona Del Mar, California.


Fable Earrings

Belflower EarringsTheFable Earrings feature clusters Swarovski rhinestone crystals on a chandelier style filigree dangling from a sterling silver post earrings. I love how much sparkle these earrings add to a simple gown or they accent a heavily embellished gown too!

These earrings are featured at The White Dress in Corona Del Mar, California, and Crowning Glory in Michigan.


Belflower Earrings

Belflower EarringsThe Belflower Earrings feature clusters Swarovski rhinestone crystals and tiny pearls on an bell style filigree dangling from fancy post earrings.

These earrings are featured at The White Dress in Corona Del Mar, California, MJ Trim Bridal Salon in NYC, and Crowning Glory in Michigan.


Renee Pawele talks Grammy Fashions

Renee Pawele talks Grammy Fashions
FEBRUARY 8, 2012

Grammy Time! Doesn’t it just conjure up images of your teenage self stealing next door to watch MTV to get your fashion/style fix since your European parents saw NO need for the luxury of cable? Or is that just me…?

Wow has the music industry heavily influenced me! Then as a wanna-be fashion designer and now as a ‘legit’ accessories designer, stylist and business owner. So….having said that, this year as I dream of attending, I’d go ALL OUT Mary J. Blige. Love her hip-hop style. HUGE hoop earrings, bell bottoms, tall boots and plenty o’ cleavage ough-ta do the trick. Which hoop earrings you ask? I’d rock these babies. Fo’. Sho.

Rihanna.jpg

Of course…in the event I am, ehem, unable to attend… I’m thinking I’d lend them out to Rihanna. SHE can work some hoops! Oooooh, wait. I like this game. So, here’s a few other pieces in my Renee Pawele collection that are not only screaming to be worn at the Grammy’s, but have also already claimed an owner. See what you think….

 

 

I’d style Adele’s classic retro bouffant ‘do with this notice the accessory, but then notice me headpiece. Yep. I’m good!

 

 

Oooooh, LOVE this for Taylor Swift. It’s young and flirty, yet classic and somewhat reserved – just like her.

 

 

This next piece? SOOOO Katy Perry! Fun and unexpected, just like her. And goes with EVERY hair color, because you just never know what she’ll be feeling that night.

 

 

This choker would be fantastic on Shikira. With her body and the way it moves?! She needs something to bring the attention back up to her lovely face, yes?

So, I think I’ve picked some definite winners from my collection for Grammy night. Watch the awards with me, won’t you, and promise me YOU’LL be inspired to try a music fashion trend (on whatever level you feel comfortable). Me and Mary? We’ll be all in for bling, bling, chains and pinky rings!


Designer Appearance and Trunk Show in Corona Del Mar, California

 

Rachel Feather Flowers

Saturday, April 12th and Sunday, April 13th, join designer Renee Pawele helping brides to select the perfect bridal accessories and veils within The White Dress bridal salon, the premier bridal boutique in Orange County. This is a great opportunity to pick out a one of a kind sash, a vintage jeweled headpiece, or even a birdcage veil!
Please contact the salon directly to make an appointment for your personalized styling session.

Schedule:

Saturday, April 12th, 10:00am – 5:00pm Sunday, April 13th, 10:00 – 5:00 pm

Location:

The White Dress
2853 East Pacific Coast Hwy
Corona Del Mar, CA 92626
949 723-0121
Website: www.thewhitedress.com

for more information or to arrange an appointment.

Photo by Kendra Weddings


Always A Bridesmaid Dress by Lori Fradkin, senior editor AOL

Congratulations! You have been selected as a bridesmaid in your friend’s wedding. Not only are you one of her closest friends, you also get a brand-new dress. Oh, sure, you will have to pay for it, and it could set you back a few hundred dollars once you factor in alterations, but let’s focus on the positive, shall we? Your friend assures you that this dress is not your average bridesmaid dress. This dress is gorgeous. It will look great on every skin tone and flatter every figure. In fact, if a musical starring Julie Andrews is ever written about this dress, “Flatter Every Figure” will be one of the songs.

You go to the bridal shop and try on a sample and let the saleswoman take your measurements. You stare at yourself in the mirror and try to picture how the dress will look when it’s three inches shorter and in a completely different color. It’s not bad, you admit. Your friend wasn’t lying. You hand over your credit card and go home. It’s just a matter of time before someone asks the inevitable: “Would you wear it again?”

If you’re like me, even if you’ve just acknowledged how inoffensive it really is, you answer no.

During my stints as a bridesmaid, I’ve found that there’s a big difference between whether I could wear a dress again and whether I would. To my friends’ credit, they have picked dresses that really did look nice, dresses that would not look out of place at a future party, and yet I have never allowed an encore. This is, in part, because of the way a dress is transformed by its first use – it’s no longer just a dress, it’s Friend’s Bridesmaid Dress. And when you’re constantly going to weddings with the same friends, this association does not go unnoticed. Once upon a time, you may have been able to get away with it at an out-of-town wedding with a different group of people – now, Facebook will tell on you. Then a certain married friend will write on your wall: “That dress looks familiar…”

But it’s not just a fear of getting caught that causes me to leave a beautiful chocolate-brown Badgley Mischka dress hanging in the closet at my parents’ house. It’s the realization that, even when the bride has our best interests at heart, it would be impossible for her to have the exact same taste as every woman in her bridal party. Just as I can recognize that Leonardo DiCaprio is an attractive man without being attracted to him, I can look at a dress and see that is pretty without being drawn to it as something I would choose for myself.

Clothes, whether they come from Zara or Dior, are one way we express ourselves. So when we receive compliments on an outfit, it’s not just our appearance at that moment that’s being praised but also our discernment – our ability to select the right piece for the occasion. We start picking out our clothes at a young age – or battling our parents to let us – because it’s a lot more satisfying to give yourself a mental “You did it!” sticker when you actually did do it. I have attended seventeen weddings in the past six years, so I’m certainly not above repeating outfits. I would just rather wear the one-shoulder cobalt-blue dress I found on my own four times (so far) than put on something that makes me feel even a smidge less special.

From the engagement party to the bridal shower, the cost of being a bridesmaid is not insignificant, so it’s not surprising that brides try to frame the dress as an investment that will pay off in the long run. But unless it’s one of those situations in which she merely specifies the color and lets the bridesmaids take it from there, I choose to view this purchase, like the penis straws used at the bachelorette party, as just part of the package. I don’t agree to be a bridesmaid to add to my wardrobe – I do it because my friend wants me to be part of her special day. What the dress looks like almost doesn’t matter.
Huffington Post Weddings


Queen Earrings

Queen EarringsThe Queen Earrings featuring large oval filigree embellished with Swarovski rhinestones dangling from a pearl and crown post.  Seattle Bride featured these fabulous earrings on their cover!
The Queen earrings are featured at Klienfelds bridal Salon in NYC, The White Dress in Corona Del Mar, Califonia , Katerina Bocci Studio in Michigan, and Crowning Glory in Michigan.


Newly Engaged and Shopping for a Wedding Gown? YOU MUST READ THIS!

Great article from the Huffington Post “What about the bride?” by Lisa Litt

Being an independent bridal gown retailer for most of my life (I am the third generation owner of my family’s bridal salon), I have seen many changes in our industry. The biggest change has been the onslaught of discount internet websites and huge warehouse chain stores. Other trends such as high necks and pouffy sleeves came and went (thankfully). Destination weddings are a welcome breath of fresh air (literally). And what about the current mini-trend of brides purchasing used, or as many prefer to call them “pre-owned” wedding gowns? (Really?)

With that said, the most curious change has been the shopping patterns of today’s brides. By that, I don’t mean how they spend their hard-earned money, but instead, HOW these women literally shop for a wedding gown.

It used to be that a newly engaged woman would bring only her mother (or closest female relative) with her for this important, hopefully, “once-in-a-lifetime” shopping experience. It used to be a very intimate, emotional and special time for a mother and daughter. After all, isn’t it “every mother’s dream” to one day shop for a wedding gown with their daughter?

I’m not sure who sent out the memo to every bride across the country, but the trend has now changed… Today’s bride feels compelled to invite everyone she knows — in addition to her mother — to shop for her wedding gown! I call it “Posse Shopping”. I have seen as many as 13 to 15 people come into my store with one bride to help her shop for her gown! These situations are not only overwhelming for the store’s sales staff, but also prove to be especially challenging for the bride. So challenging, in fact, that many times she makes the WRONG decision when choosing her gown.

Included in these small armies may (or may not) be: The bride’s mother, sister, mother-in-law-to-be, maid of honor, sister-in-law-to-be, her mother’s best friend, ALL of her BRIDESMAIDS, her second cousin once removed on her father’s side, her 10 year old niece, the gay male friend with “INCREDIBLE” taste… you get the picture.

The following are familiar scenarios that occur in bridal salons all across the country, be they large or small:

Scenario 1, Group of 7: The bride really loves a dress she puts on in the dressing room. She admires it in the mirror and is excited to show her group the lovely vintage-looking lace gown she’s so beautifully wearing. She emerges from the dressing room and hears a chorus of “Oh, nooooo… Take it off!”, “That’s not you!”, “That dress looks like my grandmother’s curtains!!!”, “Next!” And then, her mom simply says, “I think you can do better, honey.”

Downtrodden, she drags herself back into the dressing room, wishing she had come alone.

Scenario 2, Group of 10: All of her bridesmaids and her first cousin. Her bridesmaids are hung over from the night before and are chatting and giggling about the hunky guy one of them met at some dive bar they visited last night. Her cousin’s boyfriend just broke up with her and she’s a complete trainwreck. Heartbroken and jealous, she can’t get past the fact that she should be the one getting married, not her cousin. As the bride emerges from the dressing room in a lovely choice, her cousin blurts out, “Oh my Gawd, I would NEVER wear that!” The rest shout differing opinions, and give advice left and right. After a few more dresses, some appear to lose interest while others talk on their cell phones. None of them are asking which gown the BRIDE likes best. Consequently, the bride leaves confused and disappointed, and wishes she had just come with her best friend.

Scenario 3, Group of 8: The bride’s strategy is to take a poll of her posse’s favorite dresses. Four vote for the satin ball gown. Two vote for the dress at the store they all went to last weekend. One vote for the dress that the bride loves the best, a mermaid. Satin ballgown has the most votes… the bride isn’t really a satin lover but she trusts her friends’ taste. After all, that’s why she brought them, they have good taste. And, they know what looks good on her, right? Maybe the mermaid isn’t the best choice for her, even though in her heart she REALLY loves it. In the end, she purchases the satin ball gown. A month later, after many tears and sleepless nights, the bride calls the store to see if she can cancel the order because she thinks she’s made a mistake. But it’s too late. The dress is already in works. She either has to buy a SECOND dress that she really loves, or she lives to regret her decision every time she looks at her wedding photos.

Get the picture?

When did brides become so insecure in their decision making? Maybe there’s just too much information and pressure for brides out there with the internet, bridal bloggers, staged photo shoots, celebrities and reality shows all trying to influence her? Is every bride afraid they will have their own personal Joan and Melissa Rivers at their wedding saying, “What was she thinking?”???
The experts and other brides will say that shopping for a gown can be a stressful time. Society’s pressures make it even more so today. I am not saying that brides shouldn’t take anyone with them to shop for their gown. I’m just saying that they should resist the need to please everyone else, and instead make sure they please themselves.

Here’s my advice…

When a bride goes on her most special shopping trip, she should only bring her most trusted core group. It’s ok if this is just one special person, or a few special people. But do try to keep the group to no more than three. Most importantly, a bride should never forget to listen to her heart. She should always choose those friends and loved ones who will not project their tastes onto hers. She should bring along the ones who know her taste, will listen to her, be truthful yet respectful and… will help her choose the right gown for HER. After all, it is still about the bride, isn’t it?!