Despite nearly being sick in the changing room, I would just like to say that the dress fits! I went out and had a well deserved comfit of duck leg with creamy potatoes, ate half a packet of gluten free chocolate fingers and had a glass or five of wine. But I will be back on it this week.
Also, I have chosen my shoes and they have wings on them. Now they are a pair of wedding shoes with a difference. Buy them here.
So, you've got engaged and now you're planning a wedding. Which is fun, right? Until you grow scales, start breathing fire and tear down Tokyo. You have somehow turned into Bridezilla and you have no idea why... Don't worry - I am here to help you through it by doing it! Even if you're not planning a wedding, don't WANT a wedding or look back on your wedding with glowing red, sorry, fond eyes, come and enjoy the Bridechiller experience. At least you'll laugh a bit while I'm crying...
Translate me!
Showing posts with label wedding diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding diet. Show all posts
Monday, 7 July 2014
It Fits!
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Sunday, 29 June 2014
What's in a few pounds here or there?
There is nothing like a wedding to make you freak out about the way you
look, especially if it’s you who is getting married. I’m bad enough at friend’s
weddings. It takes a very secure woman to not worry about whether their dress
will fit or whether they will look their ‘best’, especially when you have 130
people taking photos of you, not to mention ones you have paid an extortionate
amount for.Women spend tens, hundreds or thousands on their appearance for their wedding day according to Soundvision. Add up everything that makes you look 'pretty' and you have one hell of an eye watering beauty list.
Like Popeye, I take a certain optimistic yet pragmatic
approach to my looks: I am what I am and yes, I do (in the main) very
much like the way that I look. My body and I have had a checkered relationship.
Like sisters who spend most of their time together arguing, we understand each
other’s advantages and faults and accept them as part of our daily life.
On some days my thighs and I are not on speaking terms. When I lie on my
back with my legs against a wall above me however, I admire them greatly. I am not thin.
Neither am I fat. I would describe myself as ‘tall but solid with fat in the
right places’. BF would describe me as having body dysmorphia and that I look lovely the way that I am. I don't believe him wholly.
Solid. Makes you think of a cow, doesn’t it. I am definitely solid. M always said I could one day be ‘willowy’ but I’ve never quite managed it. I liked food too much and exercised too little.
Solid. Makes you think of a cow, doesn’t it. I am definitely solid. M always said I could one day be ‘willowy’ but I’ve never quite managed it. I liked food too much and exercised too little.
Thanks to an enjoyable, if unsuccessful, career in filmmaking, I have a
lot of wonderful friends who can do wonderful surface things to make you look
just wonderful. Mrs MW is doing my adjustments for my dress, P (who I lived
with years ago and who used to work for a very famous London Salon) is doing my
hair. I’m ok at my own make-up and have the added bonus of getting to keep it
all afterwards having done a morning course at the Coquettes on a Groupon offer. So all
in all, I am confidant that the facial area and the over body part will look good on the day.
It’s the bit underneath that has me worried right now.
It was only when I went for my
dress measurements (bridal shops measure you to decide what dress size they
will order about seven years, sorry seven months before your wedding) that the true
desperation of the situation sank in.
I knew that I
had put weight on since going out with BF. Before we met I was at my slimmest;
almost-but-not-quite willowy. Then I started eating and keeping up with a man
and it all went south. Before I knew it I had happy fat, definite love handles
and was kicking myself a bit. And as anyone who has put on weight will know, as
you get heavier the urge to exercise lessens. A true paradox.
So I am standing
in the charming dressing room at the lovely Ellie Sanderson where I bought my
dress, in my underwear thinking, ‘my god, I’m sure I got RID of that a year or
so ago but apparently it’s back. And it’s worse’.
Accacia has tied a ribbon around my waist as a reference point (or what there
is of it – it sort of is merging with my hips and chest) and is now measuring
me gently with small, cold hands and shouting out awfully high numbers to her
assistant. My friend N (Girl friend of the Best Man) has come with me for moral support
and can hear every word. I’m feeling vaguely embarrassed. I’m also quite
mottled as it’s January and cold outside.
After I put my
clothes out and emerge feeling like I did when I picked up my first round of
A-Level module results ( I got a C and an E), it turns out, I am a couture 18. I
feel like I got an F. F for Feminism just Died a bit inside me that I even care. Turns out I am not so happy with my body after all. You
can parrot on all you want about wedding dresses being ‘ridiculous’ sizes, but
this (and the sight of myself in my under roo’s in that unflatteringly massive
mirror) has done something to me. Something has shifted in that dressing room.
And I don’t mean my side fat.
We meet the boys
for a drink and I am despondent as I sip my wine. Not as much as poor N who has
to listen to me whitter on about how fat I am for about six streets. The pork
scratchings turned to ashes in my mouth that night.
But I am never
low for long. Accacia has said that we can either get me the dress that will
fit my waist NOW but will be massive in the bust or I can aim to loose enough
weight to go one size lower. That means loosing 3 inches around my waist. That
is actually quite a lot of inches – a mountain to climb at that stage but you
think that six months is ages. Turns out it isn’t.
I ring Mrs MW to
ask her professional dress making advice – go with the one that fits now or one
which is a size smaller? Professionally, her advice is, ‘Sod it, go for the
small one and eat less.’ So I do. This is apparently against all other professional wedding advice (see
this article from Bridal
Guide) but life is just not worth living if you don’t take a few risks.
This is what I was telling myself when I ordered it.
So here I am
several months later, one gym membership in my wallet and with my dress fitting
next Saturday morning. The dress that I am hoping will do up, let alone fit.
I can’t say that
I am skinny; I am not. I can’t say that the weight has ‘fallen off’ because it
hasn't. I have however been slowly toning up and loosing weight. I have also
lost 2.5 inches from around my waist and am ½ an inch away from that 31 inch
waist band.
Looking good is
a pressure but honestly, I have come to the conclusion that you should only do
any of this rubbish if you want to. While I may have decided to spent £150 on
some random wrap thing which I have always secretly wanted to do an am using
this as an excuse (Contour Wrap – I am very excited!), it doesn't mean that you
have to. Unless you want to. If you don’t want to have a professional manicure,
then don’t have one! If your dress fits when you try it on, don’t have it
altered. What is the point in spending £400 on a pair of Jimmy Choo shoes in white that you will never wear again (thanks Frugality - top tip!)?
Finally, here are
my top ten, 100% biased, unprofessional top tips to future brides, bridesmaids, grooms or
just people who would like to loose some weight and get fit without going mad or over doing it in the process:
1) Gyms are really
expensive! My god they are
so fricking expensive. In my local area, I have the choice between the County
Council Gyms, LA Fitness,
David
Lloyd. Shop around. We wound up choosing DW because they had the combo of a
pool, gym and classes, were around the corner and frankly, were the cheapest.
At £39 a month for a 6 month contract, they are a bargain compared to other
gyms pricing up at £60-80 a month on a year long contract. It is worth it. I am
sure you can do it on your own but there is something about ‘getting my moneys
worth’ which keeps me going….
2) Get a personal
Trainer. I mean it. I
was never one of those people who thought having a personal trainer was worth
the money and then I found Simon. Simon is a
genius. He is encouraging, pushes me hard without making me want to cry and is
very reasonable price wise – find out some prices and they will surprise you.
Plus I get to say ‘Simon says’ at least once a day to BF. Get someone you feel
comfortable with and who understands what your goals are. They will even work
you out a diet plan. It is 100% worth the effort and cost.
3) Go to classes. I love
classes!! Zumba! Boxercise! Bodycombat! So much better than trudging around the
machines in a boring routine, they will work every inch of you and make sure
that you are toned all over instead of just doing loads of cardio. You can also
work at your own pace and get what you want out of them.
4) Just stop eating
shit. Seriously. No
crisps, no cake, no biscuits, no jam. Do you need ice cream on those
strawberries? OK, you do, but do you need that much? Had a long day and need a glass of wine? NO! You don’t! Just
by cutting out crap you’ll find you seriously help yourself along, especially
if you can give up booze. I actually cut out sugar. Seriously. I make my own
muesli with oats, dried fruit, some flaked almonds and some truvia now. Didn’t
see that one coming….
5) If the diet
sounds too good to be true, it totally is. Do I think raspberry
keytones have made ANY difference to my weight? No. Has drinking buckets of
green tea made me thinner? No. Not that I don’t take them. BF calls them
‘expensive wee’. What has made me thinner is eating brekkie, not snacking,
having salad and chicken for lunch and an uber healthy meal in the evening.
It’s depressing. I hate it. But it works. My
Fitness Pal is a free app and will track your calories and also your exercise
routine. Plus you can make rude comments on all of your friend’s pages.
6) Measure inches.
Sod the weight. It’s an indication of nowt as BF would say. Keep an idea of it sure,
but if you’re doing what I’m doing and aiming for visits to the gym at least 4
times a week, then you are not going to loose much weight. What you are going
to do is loose fat and gain muscle. Which is good. Read this article on Muscle
Vs Fat. Basically not only does muscle take up less space and look better
but it also means you burn more calories just doing nothing by increasing your
metabolic efficiency. BONUS! So any girls out there who think weights are for
boys, think again!
7) Be realistic. My bingo wings
are not going to go, however much Boxercise and Bodycombat I do between now and
the wedding. Sad but true. Do I worry? No! I am just going to have to accept
that I have slightly plump arms. At least I HAVE arms.
8) Loose it slow
and keep it off. And don’t stress about it. It won’t go any faster for you fretting
(sorry to all of my friends who have constant weight updates – FYI, I am
fretting a lot). Your future husband doesn’t give a shit if you have lost weight.
I almost guarantee he didn’t propose to you just to have you turning into some
food crazed dragon woman. He liked you how you were before enough to buy it.
Loosing weight is for yourself and yourself alone.
9) You’re going to
look epic no matter what. Really, you are.
10) Don’t believe
everything you read. BF is a scientist and I am not. He never accepts
things for what they are at face value whereas I do. When I say ‘potatoes are
bad for you’ he comes back with this article
which actually proves that is tosh. Yes, potatoes are not bad for you! Stop saying they are. Imagine what else you are
told is going to help and is actually merely causing you misery! Do some proper
research when people tell you to ‘cut’ things out. Mainly it’s about
moderation, not prohibition.

I just hope I
can keep it up long enough.
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Saturday, 14 December 2013
Dress Shopping is not as easy at it first appears.....
Here's the thing.
I have been
genuinely excited about one major thing after BF popped the question and the dust settled a
bit, and that was trying on wedding dresses. In those amazingly clean, expensive looking
shops. Where everything in them is white. The colour favoured by Rich People.
People who don’t care about spilling food down themselves because they can
afford dry cleaning. And everything is a sort of rosy pink or mint green silk
on the curtains or gold gilded. The shops you never go into unless you’re
getting married. The shops I used to hate when I was single bah humbug.
I’m sure all ladies out there are
with me here – actively going and trying on wedding dresses if you’re not engaged
feels like a taboo. You just don’t do it.
Take that ridiculous jingle
everyone over 60 seems to trot out at weddings: ‘Three times a bridesmaid, never a bride’. Which basically is saying
in old fashioned lingo; ‘you will never find the love of your life if you’re
always being a bridesmaid’? Gee whizzers. Harsh. I can remember as a little girl being warned
when I was bridesmaid for my cousin’s wedding by my Granny (God rest her), ‘Second
time! Three times and you’ll never get married’ and genuinely feeling worried
that it might come true.
I was nine.
These odd taboos get into our
heads and boy, do they mess with it. By the time turn 5 in my Bridesmaiding
career came around I was so resigned to being single I actually found myself
wondering if there was something in it. After all I was, by the looks of it,
never going to meet anyone, let alone marry them. It must be true! I am cursed!
The fact that I met BF on my 6th turn as a bridesmaid is testimony
to what an absolute load of bosh the whole thing is.
Regardless, I would never, ever
even THINK of trying on a wedding dress in a shop before I was engaged to
anyone at any time of my life just in
case.
So when I finally got around to
trying on a dress I had built the whole experience up to Monstrous Proportions.
I was genuinely terrified. There
was something about that massive white frock and its’ three to four number
price tag that made the whole thing somehow a lot more real. So I put it off
for a while until M, understandably very excited about seeing her only daughter
in a wedding dress, finally cornered me and I reluctantly made some
appointments with a trembling hand wondering what the hell they were doing to
do to me for an hour and half long appointment.
Quick break from the story here
for all those who haven’t been through the circus of picking a dress.
The way I see it, there are
several kinds of wedding dress shops. You get your boutique shops where you
have to make an appointment REALLY far in advance and everything costs over
£1500 and the ladies are called ‘Chrystal’ and ‘Denise’ and where basically
anything you put on will look stunning. Anything. Every dress in that
shop is priced high for a reason. It might not be the dress for you but it’s
beautifully cut and is made to make any woman look like a goddess. Strictly no photos please. There is not a
tiara in sight. They use special bands to tie up the back of the dress. The
dresses are usually all made in the UK or America and are guaranteed to make you
leave feeling that in fact £4000 is not a bad price for perfection really….
Then you have your mid-range
shops (my favourite) usually in the smaller towns which sell lots of dresses made
in Europe. There are a lot of Mermaid style dresses around at the moment in
these shops. Lots. And lace. Lots of lace. The most expensive dress might set
you back £1200 at most but mainly they are around £900. You usually get seen by
the owner of the shop which makes you feel quite special. Always book to make
an appointment. They have a selection of bridesmaid dresses and you get a good
discount if you buy everything with them. Some places allow photos, others
don’t. You get fastened up with elastic bands at the back and usually you want
to buy from them as they are just so lovely. I am a fan of a mid-range shop.
Although I didn’t see my perfect frock in any of them I had two amazing
experiences at Katherine Allen
Bridal in Banbury and Fantasia
Bridal in Abingdon. If you live nearby GO! They are just lovely.
Finally you have your local bridal salon. I adore them. I
really do. They are always run by women who know their stuff but have none of
consummate showmanship that somewhere calling themselves a ‘boutique’ would
have. Literally none. Once I was just given a dress and told to get into it.
Just, you know, get in it. The dress stood up on its own and I didn’t even know
where to start. There are none of the silk and satin changing cubicles, soft
carpets or platforms to stand on which the Mid-range and Top and Mid-range
shops have. Neither do you get cosseted. It’s plain business with these
dresses. There are Tiaras everywhere. You get fastened at the back with a giant
crocodile clip. And every dress has sequins. Every frock is a Princess Frock.
Mainly the dresses are from China.
Then you have your sample sales.
But more of this later.
I rang up for my first two
appointments for a Mid-range shop in the morning and a Top-range shop in the
afternoon with M. And I was incredibly nervous. I had a bikini wax. I wore a
strapless bra. I shaved my legs. I was genuinely upset when my hair just wouldn’t dry!
M was pretty amazing. She is
generally pretty amazing – she is buying my dress and said airily on the way
that she had expected to pay £x so not to worry. Blimey, I thought. Blimey.
Panic increased.
That morning I found out:1) I look really good in strapless dresses. Which is annoying as I get really peeved at the amount of people in strapless wedding dresses. It’s like every bride for the last 5 years has bought the same dress. I am starting to see why.
2) I look pretty good in most wedding dresses. Ego overdrive yes. But I have always suited properly structured dresses (I did a lot of historical stage plays and spent a whole week in Edinburgh living in an 18th Century frock). So actually, there were loads of dresses that would have looked lovely for BF and my wedding. That wasn’t the issue; these frocks are designed to look GOOD! It’s getting the right one for you that’s the problem….
3) I love massive frocks and massive frocks love me. MASSIVE. MASSIVE! M restrained me in the end but there is nothing like looking at yourself in a dress that makes you feel like you’re in a Ballroom scene from a Victorian Melodrama….
4) A belt really helps. It makes your waist look teeny. Genius.
5) I do not suit a mermaid style dress. My bum is too big, my boobs too small.
6) Sample sizes are weird. I fitted in one 14, not in another, another 16 was too small and then she laced me into a 10. Say what?
7) If you’re getting married and are in a hurry, shop around for a sale dress. Wowser, you can get some good deals!
All that in one morning. Talk
about a crash course in wedding dress shopping. By now my hair was dry and,
feeling more confident, M and I packed into the car and trundled to a larger
town. We had lunch and then went to our next appointment. Ellie Sanderson in Oxford. One of the
top ranges. Eek!!
By now, despite my lovely
experience of the morning I was getting nervous again. I imagined Pretty Woman
and a snobby shop assistant. I even ran to loo’s to try and make my now insane
hair (you lift dresses over the head – put your hair up!) actually sit in some
kind of normal way. What I got was Acacia.
What a doll. Just a lovely lady.
Down to earth, helpful and willing to find the perfect dress, she sat M and I
in on the chaise lounge and talked us through the options. Using the knowledge
I had gleaned that morning, she helped me pick out a few dresses to try and in
I went with the special fastening on the back done up very quickly.
Naturally they were the most
expensive ones in the shop but they were stunning. The first one I tried on by Suzanne Neville could be cut to any shape on the top as they made it for me. It was stunning and had a price tag to match. But by god, internal corset, English cotton lace and a silhouette to die for, you were paying for a thing of beauty.
By this point money and sense had gone out of the window and M and I were feeling slightly carried away. In the end we made ourselves go away, giddy with luxury, and think about it and reminded ourselves that we had plenty of time.
No, we didn’t. Every shop I went
into told me bluntly that looking for dresses for a wedding 10 months away is
actually not a long time. You need to order the dress in time for it to be
fitted. Ordering before Christmas would be best. No pressure.
Argh. Argh.
Now came the Bleak Time. I tried
on so many dresses. So very many. All lovely. But none the Right One.
I tried all ranges of shops. I
had a brilliant experience in the very friendly shop in my home town at Brocades with M
and MinL where, despite me having mild bronchitis, we tried on lots of wonderful
MASSIVE frocks with some of the most down to earth shop assistants on the
planet. But after a while I was in a big white blur. I couldn’t make M pay for
the beautiful dresses I had tried on with lots of numbers in the price tag
which had been the closest thing to what I wanted – I just couldn’t. And after
a while….it becomes a chore. A CHORE! Finding your bloody wedding dress is just
another thing to be done and ticked off the list. This was not right. Something
had to be done.
I was not Bridechiller. No. Once
again she was creeping closer, the panic inducing ‘I’ll just buy that MASSIVE
Chinese frock because I don’t care anymore’ Bridezilla. And then the email
popped through about the Sample Sale at Ellie Sanderson in Beaconsfield.
So with a bit of organising I got
an appointment for 9.30am (with the philosophy that everything good would be
gone later on), rallied the troops (M and Mrs McW – M because I wouldn’t buy a
dress without her and Mrs McW because I wouldn’t buy a dress without her and
also she had offered to see if she could make anything out of the usually small
sample sizes for me to fit into) and off we headed to Beaconsfield.
Sample Sales are fun! I don’t
care what anyone says. You get given a coloured tag and pop it on frocks. You
share a changing room with another excited bride (there is just enough
competition with ‘Oh, I like that dress’ to ‘Get off it’s mine!’ to add piquancy to the
experience while everyone is actually PICKING THEIR WEDDING DRESS together
which is amazingly fun). You get whisked into the chosen frock and then wander
out into this bright, hard edged territory filled with slightly harassed
looking mums, very busy shop assistants rushing around dressed in funereal
black and loads of youngish women in big white dresses turning this way and
that in the mirror worriedly wondering if this is the one and if not, can they
try on that dress over there that that other woman is in please? Now! Before she buys it!!
And occasionally you get to see
the brilliantly smiling, joyful face of the girl who has found her dress at 50%
off. Pricelessly wonderful to see I can tell you. I got a lot of vicarious
happiness out of a few of those.
I was sharing a changing room
with a very smiley young woman around my age with amazing red curly hair. In
the end it got very jolly with us admiring each other’s frocks. I tried on few
(all very nice but not right for one reason or another). M and Mrs MW found a
veil reduced to £70 which had a beautiful lace edge and decided I was going to
wear it (fair enough).
And then, I put it on. The Dress.
It was about two sizes too small so this actual dress obviously wasn’t THE
dress, but it was the perfect style. The price tag had one more number than was
desired but having looked at me M said screw it. We put down the deposit that day
and it was all up to me to get the weight off for the fitting in January. The
best thing was that Acacia is going to be measuring me in the Oxford branch and
I hope gets the commission from the sale. That woman had worked HARD when we’d
seen her last!
Heading back in the changing room
in my wedding dress the young lady sharing the cubical asked if I was going to
buy it. I said yes, but not the sample as it was too small. I don’t know
whether I recommended that she tried it on, whether she had already tried it on
and liked it on me or whether she just liked it, but she wound up buying it. We
swopped emails in the trendy pub where we’d both independently gone for a drink
of champagne afterwards and I can’t wait to see how beautiful she looks in it.
I am allowed to be cheesy. It’s
my wedding dress.
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Ring a Ding Ding
I was out in Oxford with Mrs McW
and we had been looking (you know, idly looking) at jewellers. Everything is so
expensive. For example, even at a mid range high street
jewellers you are looking at £1000 + for a teeny little solitaire. I am sure
it’s a highly clear, carroted solitaire but it is teeny. Do they not know I have medium sized hands?

And the even better thing other than having a beautiful, individual, ethical (so far as I can tell) and vintage ring which BF made sure fitted by taking one of my old rings with him to have it resized? Looking on Ebay to find one exactly the same being sold for a lot more in America. Result.
Here is a good example.
Now while I’m sure this is a
stunning ring for a lot of you girls, I have always felt (and this is very personal I know) that platinum or white
gold looks basically like silver, besides which I like gold, and I'm also not fond of solitaires. Which are everywhere.
There was some vague talk of
using the gold from my Great Grandmother’s ring melted down and then buying the
stones but honestly, neither BF or I were organised enough. I don’t think he
wanted to over think the engagement to that extent either.
Also I was horrified when I did
some digging to find out the ethical responsibility you take on when you buy
newly mined diamonds.
The Kimberley process was set up to attempt to monitor the diamond trade in 2003 after noticing that the international diamond trade might just be fuelling human rights violations in a collection of African nations. Unfortunately, despite wide spread publicity, few retailers can guarantee their diamonds are conflict free.
You can’t even prove that they
ARE certified by the Kimberley Press according to Wikipedia:
“The Kimberley Process has ultimately failed to stem the flow of
blood diamonds, leading key proponents such as Global Witness to abandon the
scheme.[32] In addition, there is no
guarantee that diamonds with a Kimberley Process Certification are in fact
conflict free. This is due to the nature of the corrupt government officials in
the leading diamond producing countries. It is common for these officials to be
bribed with $50 to $100 a day in exchange for paperwork declaring that blood
diamonds are Kimberley Process Certified”
Good god. Not only am I Bridechiller,
now I am also an ethical bride! I have to be because what I’m reading here is
pretty horrifying. ‘Blood Diamond’ was based on something apparently.
So not only do these rings you’re
looking at cost about 8 times what they will be when your fella walks out of
the shop with them (they’re apparently like a car – remove a wadge when you
drive it off the show room) but they are also unethical purchases. What to do?
Engagement rings were originally like collateral. The Romans would pledge rings to one another. If you were rich enough a ring was like a business pledge. 'I will legally tie myself to your daughter; here is something expensive which you can keep as a deposit until I do'. As an avid reader of Georgette Heyer I can also tell you, women can break off an engagement, men cannot. It's just not done, sir! Would the lady keep the ring if she did break it off? Well, if that ring (never diamond by the way) had been 200 years old and in the family as the heir's pledge ring to his future wife? Maybe not. Would you keep your engagement ring if your fiance jilted you? Heck yes. I can imagine the law suits. You can see why ladies were expected to break it off; you'd hardly keep the ring if you made the decision to end it.
Engagement rings became aped by the middle classes in turn. When diamond mines were discovered in parts of Africa and Asia in the late 19th Century, diamonds became a plentiful stone. The aspiring middle classes were the perfect market to flog the sparkly little gems to, especially when they could be pimped up with a smaller but more expensive sapphire or ruby. It's Frances Gerety, an advertising copywriter, who coined the genius slogan 'Diamonds are Forever' in 1947. The rise in pre-marital sex in the 1940's corresponded to a surge in engagement rings. After all, if a ring is a pledge of marriage, why wouldn't you? Diamonds are a girl's best friend and you should always get that ring before you open your legs.... crude but effective.
Engagement rings were originally like collateral. The Romans would pledge rings to one another. If you were rich enough a ring was like a business pledge. 'I will legally tie myself to your daughter; here is something expensive which you can keep as a deposit until I do'. As an avid reader of Georgette Heyer I can also tell you, women can break off an engagement, men cannot. It's just not done, sir! Would the lady keep the ring if she did break it off? Well, if that ring (never diamond by the way) had been 200 years old and in the family as the heir's pledge ring to his future wife? Maybe not. Would you keep your engagement ring if your fiance jilted you? Heck yes. I can imagine the law suits. You can see why ladies were expected to break it off; you'd hardly keep the ring if you made the decision to end it.
Engagement rings became aped by the middle classes in turn. When diamond mines were discovered in parts of Africa and Asia in the late 19th Century, diamonds became a plentiful stone. The aspiring middle classes were the perfect market to flog the sparkly little gems to, especially when they could be pimped up with a smaller but more expensive sapphire or ruby. It's Frances Gerety, an advertising copywriter, who coined the genius slogan 'Diamonds are Forever' in 1947. The rise in pre-marital sex in the 1940's corresponded to a surge in engagement rings. After all, if a ring is a pledge of marriage, why wouldn't you? Diamonds are a girl's best friend and you should always get that ring before you open your legs.... crude but effective.
Do you even need to have a diamond? My best friend T has as beautiful sapphire and diamond vintage art deco ring. Mrs McW herself has a custom made sapphire engagement ring which she wears as a combination engagement and wedding ring. Hatton Gardens, the Jewellery Quarter in Birmingham and the Lanes in Brighton are all excellent places to go second hand ring shopping.
In
the end I saw it in a gallery shop where I live and Mrs McW took BF down the
very next day and he bought it.
I think this was a relief for us
both. We have just cleared off our debt and there we were considering putting it on a credit card. Which is stupid.
Now I have a wonderful, turn of
the century ring in gold.

And the even better thing other than having a beautiful, individual, ethical (so far as I can tell) and vintage ring which BF made sure fitted by taking one of my old rings with him to have it resized? Looking on Ebay to find one exactly the same being sold for a lot more in America. Result.
Labels:
bride fat,
bridesmaids,
diamond,
engaged,
engagement ring,
ethical diamond,
marriage,
relationship advice,
relationships,
wedding,
wedding advice,
wedding diet,
wedding dress,
wedding ring,
weddings
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