Browse by Colour Family
Pink and blush: pink bridesmaid dresses from soft blush to dusty rose. Blue family: blue bridesmaid dresses from dusty blue to sapphire, plus deeper navy bridesmaid dresses.
Green family: sage bridesmaid dresses for soft natural tones, plus deeper green bridesmaid dresses for jewel tones. Red family: burgundy bridesmaid dresses for autumn and winter weddings.
Neutrals and Statement Tones
Neutrals: champagne bridesmaid dresses for soft warm tones that flatter every skin tone. Statement: black bridesmaid dresses for modern and black tie weddings.
Each colour family carries multiple shade variants in person. Champagne reads warmer than ivory. Sapphire blue reads brighter than navy. Sage reads softer than emerald. The right shade depends on venue lighting, wedding palette, and bridal party skin tones.
How to Choose a Bridesmaid Colour
Start with the season: spring and summer favour soft pastels and lighter shades; autumn and winter favour jewel tones and warm neutrals. Then check the venue: outdoor and garden weddings suit organic colours like sage and champagne; indoor and formal venues suit deeper tones like burgundy and sapphire.
Finally, consider the bridal party: how does the chosen colour read against multiple skin tones? Is it forgiving across hair colours? Does it photograph cleanly under your venue’s lighting? Swatches answer all three questions.
Two Fabrics, Same Colours Mostly
Classic matte jersey carries 55+ colours - the widest range. Luxe Satin carries 10+ specific evening-ready colours including burgundy, sapphire blue, dusty blue, emerald, mulberry, copper, dark eucalyptus, light gold, and champagne.
A common bridal party approach: maid of honour in Luxe Satin while the rest of the party wears Classic in the same colour family. Same shade, different finish, layered photography.
Order Swatches First
Colours read differently on every screen. Order fabric swatches to see exact tones in person before committing. Swatches ship free worldwide.
Most brides order three to five colours to compare against the wedding palette and venue lighting.