Marigo Mihalos Sfaelos’s brought many outfits to her four-day, event-filled wedding in Karpathos, Greece, last year. There was the silk citrine Greek goddess-style dress, a floral appliqué Estee Couture bridal gown, and a disco ball-inspired floor-length dress for the after party. But the showstopper was worn at the post-wedding beach party: a gladiator-like metal and silver bikini with rhinestones, from the designer Karen Sabag’s Rêver collection, along with a matching overlay skirt.
“I wanted it to be a bridal look that stood out, and the bride should stand out,” said Mrs. Mihalos Sfaelos, 35, a senior director of talent relations at SiriusXM radio in New York. She married Spiro Sfaelos, a 37-year-old restaurant owner, atop a cliff on Aug. 27, 2022, on the Greek island where shew grew up. “You can’t just wear a white bathing suit.”
Other brides seem to feel the same way, especially with destination weddings, and designers and stylists are paying close attention. Today’s bridal swimwear are not just fashion-forward white bathing suits — they are beaded and bedazzled, fancy and frilly, lacy and Lycra-fitted, and custom made.
Mrs. Mihalos Sfaelos said her bathing suit felt bridal.
“Like a bridal dress, it was a full statement,” said Mrs. Mihalos Sfaelos, who lives in Clifton, N.J. “It was a one-of-a-kind, custom-made item tailored to my body. As much attention to the wedding dress was paid to this bathing suit.”
Like a wedding gown, Ms. Sabag, who also made her second wedding dress, took measurements and did two fittings.
Samantha Brown, a professional stylist in New York, sees bridal swimwear as a trend that’s likely here to stay. “We used to see brides wearing gigantic gowns on the beach, which never made any sense,” she said. “They were heavy, dragging through the sand and out of place for the venue. Now, people are trying to find unique touch points that make their wedding memorable and photographically beautiful.”
Designers like Marysia, Anemoss and Giambattista Valli have sporadically offered swimsuit options in their collections, though they have not developed a fully dedicated bridal line. One designer has: Demi Raquel Thomas debuted her ready-to-wear bridal swimwear company, La Chenille Bridal Bikini, in April 2021 with a party in New York. The company concentrates on bachelorette parties, honeymoons and wedding wear.
“These are one-of-a-kind pieces that make brides look and feel as special as if they were wearing a traditional wedding gown,” said Ms. Thomas, who is based in Marina del Ray, Calif., and plans to open a showroom in Manhattan next year. Her bridal line is currently only available on her website.
Ms. Thomas says she has seen a 25 to 30 percent increase in sales from 2021 to 2022.
Still, an overall lack of offerings has made finding bridal swimwear challenging. Elizabeth Paladeau, 31, a senior manager of special projects for Gucci who lives in Manhattan, said she had trouble finding a special swimsuit for her three-day Amalfi Coast Beach wedding last September. She said she “didn’t find a trove of bridal swimwear options, because they weren’t as trendy as they are now,” she said. (She ended up wearing a Chanel white one-piece with black piping and a matching crystal netted skirt.)
In the past, Ms. Thomas explained, brides typically wanted just one or two outfits. “Gen Zs and millennials want five or six, for the ceremony, reception, first dance, cake, after party and beach themed activities,” she said.
Before plunging into the bridal swimwear market, Ms. Thomas spent a year immersed in research. She hired an online marketing company and acquired data and statistics about the fashion and wedding industry, among other things.
“This is a niche category,” she said, “I learned 60 percent of couples were having or wanted beach or a pool weddings. I realized no one was offering a high-end, luxury look that was also comfortable to wear.”
Ms. Thomas started out with about 20 pieces, including swimsuits, cover-ups and jackets, custom made with beaded and sequined fabric like organza and toile. Then, they are adorned by hand-sewn appliqués, crystals, taffeta, and trim. Depending on style and craftsmanship, tops can cost $600 to $800, bottoms from $550 to $800, and one pieces around $1,300 to $2,000. Full-length cover-ups can start at $1,800 and go as high as $7,000.
“We have a rose coat with 200 organza and toile roses,” she said of a jacket that costs $6,000. “I didn’t want to be middle market brand.” She said she is also looking into eventually offering plus-size pieces.
Ms. Sabag, who lives in Roslyn, N.Y., started Karen Sabag Bridal, in 2008, offering handcrafted, atelier dresses. Her designs range in price from $10,000 to $30,000 and beyond. Over the last several years, “more brides were asking for swimsuits,” she said.
In November 2020, she created Rêver (which means dream in French), specializing in custom, hand-embellished swimsuits and lingerie. This summer, she will open her first Rêver flagship store in Gravesend, Brooklyn, offering 18 swimsuit styles and 40 interchangeable items, including cover tops, overlays and lingerie. Like Ms. Thomas, Ms. Sabag uses imported Chantilly and beaded lace, delicate silks, pearls, stones, embroidery and corsetry.
“I’m a detailed designer,” she said. “These are high-end couture pieces that can be worn in the water, with a cover-up, and look like bridal dresses.” Her swimsuits cost $450 to $1,200 while cover-ups range from $800 to $2,500.
Ms. Sabag says she sees more than 200 brides in a year, and about half of them buy swimsuits.
“That’s a huge number,” she said, adding that women who are not planning weddings “are also buying the line, and wearing our tops and cover-ups with jeans and pants. “There’s a demand for this. It’s become a recognized entity to bridal wardrobes.”
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