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Brides Who Wore Casual Outfits For Their Wedding Ceremonies

These Casual Brides Will Make You Want to Throw on Pants and Head to City Hall

The longer the coronavirus pandemic lasts, keeping people at home sheltering in place, the more holiday celebrations, calendar-worthy gatherings, and yes, even weddings, will get postponed and cancelled. Should a change in wedding plans be top of mind right now? Probably not for everyone, but for couples who have been planning their nuptials, there is a sense of loss that sets in following the initial panic: "Oh, my wedding day is going to be much different than I thought it would be."

"Some very bold and very iconic ladies tied the knot with black tie attire completely out of the equation."

Carolina Herrera invited people from the bridal community to get together for a Zoom meeting, led by celebrity and bridal stylist Micaela Erlanger, who I personally visited the Carolina Herrera New York showroom with last season. As a community, the panel discussed the general mood (Love isn't cancelled!) and shifting nature of the industry. Camille Russler, owner of Ever After Boutique, was tapped specifically to dole out advice for brides about wedding dresses that may or may not come to fruition exactly as expected.

"For brides thinking about their wedding dress saying, 'Well, I just want to get married. I just want to have a civil ceremony or I just want to get married in my backyard because I love my fiancé and I want to have a wedding,' do it. Have the ceremony and wear a beautiful little white dress. Have your intimate wedding and have that memory. You can reschedule your big event with your dream dress if you want to," Camille said, who maintained a practical yet sympathetic perspective throughout the conference call.

Camille got me thinking about women throughout history that I have admired for being a lot more laid-back about their ceremonies, down to their fashion mentality. Some very bold and very iconic ladies, from Audrey Hepburn and Brigitte Bardot to Cindy Crawford and Amal Clooney, tied the knot with "black tie" attire completely out of the equation. Their weddings were simple; their outfit choices felt comfortable and painted a picture of who they were. More recently, we have Emily Ratajkowski, who chose a marigold Zara pantsuit and Julia Garner, who tapped Danielle Frankel for ribbed matching coordinates, both young stars wearing the looks proudly to City Hall. Whether or not they hosted another event later on — yes, I know about Amal Clooney's lace Oscar de la Renta ballgown — the most official moment of all was not about glamour.

If you're a bride whose wedding day is affected by the COVID-19 crisis and you still want to get married on your upcoming wedding date, you can make that happen, even if it doesn't involve the whole family. And even if your date is not on the books anytime soon, perhaps you'll consider a bridal ensemble that would fit in right beside the rest of the clothes in your closet after you see the historic examples I've gathered below. Your look will still be special — not because it's well-kept in a garment bag to be unwrapped in a bridal suite somewhere — but because it feels like you.

Emily accessorised her look with a black netted fedora.

Emily held a small bouquet of marigold flowers.

She accessorised with an elaborate bib necklace for the couple's visit to Beverley Hills courthouse.

Amal wore a number of gorgeous bridal looks for her wedding weekend in Venice in 2014, where she married George Clooney. When the couple stepped into the courthouse to officialize their nuptials, she carried an envelope clutch and wore a wide-brim hat to complement the casual-chic pants look by British designer Stella McCartney.

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For her wedding to Rande Gerber, Cindy went for a beachy sheath that hit above the knee. She later called the dress "exactly what she wanted."

Bianca married Mick Jagger in 1971 in St. Tropez wearing a midi length skirt, lightweight blazer, espadrilles, and wide-brim hat.

Image Source: Getty / Express

Farrow and Frank Sinatra wed at The Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas in 1966. Mia's outfit was simple: a double-breasted, three-quarter sleeve jacket, matching A-line skirt, and glove pumps.

Image Source: Getty / Bettmann
Image Source: Getty / Bettmann

She married Jacques Charrier in France in 1959, styling this summer dress with little kitten heels.

She married Patrick Curtis in France in 1967 at Paris's City Hall. She wore simple strappy shoes and arrived in a furry coat.

When Audrey married her second husband, Andrea Dotti, Hubert de Givenchy designed her pale pink dress, which she wore with tights, flats, and a head scarf. It certainly wasn't the only time Hepburn wore trusted friend and designer Givenchy.

Image Source: Getty / Getty Images

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