What Are Appropriate Wedding Shoes?
Provided By:
weddingchecklists.net
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Choose Comfort
Many prospective brides get so involved in minor details that their wedding day is full of stress. The dress, no matter what style, can be worn with any number of footwear styles. When choosing wedding shoes, don’t plan to spend the entire day in expensive high heels.
In fact, if you are wearing a floor-length dress, you might select flats without any heels. Brides have worn anything from ballet slippers to comfortable walking shoes under their gowns. If the shoes aren’t comfortable while you are standing at the altar, they won’t be comfortable at the reception.
Color
If your dress is traditional white, white wedding shoes are obviously best and there are countless styles available. If you find a pair of heels that you absolutely must have, plan to wear them for the ceremony only.
Bring along another, more comfortable, pair of white shoes or slippers for the reception. If your dress is another color, or has hints of color, consider dying the wedding shoes to match, but remember, less is more. Just the slightest hint of color is often enough.
Don’t Spend a Fortune
Weddings are so expensive that you must carefully decide how you are willing to spend your hard-earned money. To spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on a pair of wedding shoes that you’ll be wearing for less than an hour and, in most cases, will only partially show under the bottom of your gown, is foolish.
Unless you are known for your huge collection of designer shoes, or dress designers consult you before their fall fashions are presented, no one will know what shoes you are wearing if you don’t draw undue attention to them. Instead of expensive wedding shoes, consider dressing up your ensemble with a pair of embroidered or textured silk stockings; they’ll show when your gown is lifted to retrieve the garter, and will be much more noticeable.
Wear Them In
Do not choose the day or night before the ceremony to start breaking in your wedding shoes. There is no need to be walking down the aisle with a blister on your heel or toe, from shoes rubbing up against your skin. On the same note, there is no reason that dancing at the reception should create a huge blister that will bother you for the entire honeymoon.
When you look around the reception while people are dancing, you’ll notice at least some have kicked off their shoes. You want your guests to be comfortable, and they want you to be comfortable, as well.
If your wedding shoes have enough room (or are too tight) to cause rubbing, consider putting some cotton balls in the toe or behind the heel to make them more comfortable. Of course, if you give yourself enough time to determine that they won’t do, you’ll have enough time to find another pair if necessary.
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