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When the Wuthering Heights production team unveiled a first-look photo of Margot Robbie floating around the moors in what appeared to be a wedding dress stolen off a primetime soap opera set, literary loyalists were inconsolable. Emily Brontë’s Cathy—fragile, feral, and tragically unwed—was never meant to be cloaked in layers of organza puff and Hollywood pomp. The silhouette clashed with the novel’s early 1800s timeline. Somewhere between anachronism and aesthetic misfire, the gown became a cautionary tale: the wrong dress, in the wrong narrative, can rattle even the undead. Which is why, at New York Bridal Fashion Week 2026—where the gowns may be dramatic, over-the-top, and occasionally unhinged—they at least came with the right story.
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Bows Before Bros


If a bow appears and nobody knows how to wear it, does it still make a sound? Bridal Fashion Week said yes. They sprouted on shoulders, snaked around waists, trailed behind like bridal breadcrumbs. Some were delicate as a thank-you note; others looked like they’d wrestled a gift box and won. A bow is a declaration, and if you can’t defend it, maybe you shouldn’t wear it.
The Cloud Complex




The bubble hem is back and it’s not here for your approval. It is ballooning across skirts and sleeves like a runaway bridal soufflé. It’s prom queen-meets-Pixar character, where the bubble silhouette is bridal couture’s answer to the inflatable economy: you’re not overdressed, you’re levitating.
White Adjacent



Call it cream, champagne, blush, even off-white—just don’t call it white. This season, white got dethroned by off-tones. It’s not for shock value; it’s choosing a color that doesn’t already have centuries of meaning hanging off it. Wear ivory if you must. Dove grey if you’re feeling poetic. Lilac if your father still hasn’t paid the caterer. It’s your day. Curse the canon.
Laced With Intent



Lace is no longer whispering sweet nothings, but spelling things out in capital letters. This season, it wasn’t soft or secondary. It has edge, confidence, and a little voyeurism. Whether it framed a sheer sleeve or took over an entire gown, the looks show romance isn’t always soft, and neither is the bride.
Sculpted Draping



Fabric was folded, twisted, and pleated into architectural experiments worthy of a MoMA retrospective. Draping isn’t new, but the sharpness this season was nearly confrontational. It’s the kind of dress that says: Yes, I have opinions. Yes, this is silk faille. And no, I will not be throwing a bouquet.
No matter the shape, shade, or shine, Bridal Week proved one thing: the dress isn’t there to make you look good. It’s there to make an entrance, start a rumor, maybe change a life. And if it bothers a few purists along the way—well, at least it’s memorable.
Photos: MONIQUE LHUILLIER, HOUSE OF GILLES, FRANCESCA MIRANDA, VARCA, IDAN COHEN, MARK INGRAM, REBECCA VALLANCE, ELIE SAAB, LIHI HOD, KATHERINE TASH, DANIELLE FRANKEL, SEPT, and GALIA LAHAV
