Couples ditching traditional dress codes in favour of unusual wedding themes

More couples appear to be ditching tradition when it comes to what wedding guests should wear, to the confusion of some of those invited.
Maggie Long, 34, recently attended the nuptials of a close friend in a low-key Denver lounge. The suggested dress was âDive Bar Semiformalâ.
âI love a theme,â said Ms Long, who lives in New York. âItâs fun that people arenât taking weddings so seriously, but I had no idea what that meant.â
After exchanging thoughts for months with the officiant, who is also a friend, Ms Long took her outfit idea â a strappy-back, low-cut ultra-mini purple dress with a high side slit â to the bride.

The bride deemed it a bit too âKardashian cosplayâ and Ms Long finally settled on a longer gold dress by Norma Kamali, and a great time was had.
âThere were a lot of vintage jumpsuits. One of our friends went full 1960s with go-go boots and a bouffant. A lot of sequins were happening,â Ms Long said.
Some couples are offering mood boards as a way to guide guests, including older ones. At the dive bar wedding, Ms Long said plenty of older guests got into the spirit. One donned a rainbow tie-dye T-shirt.
Other wedding guests have contended with âTropical Formalâ, âSnappy Casualâ and âGarden Party Whimsicalâ.
Heading into the busy summer season for weddings and other special events, Indya Wright in Washington DC has had enough.
She recently posted on Twitter: âThese new age event dress codes are the bane of my existence. What happened to just âcasual,â âcocktailâ and âformalâ? Now I gotta Google âAfter 5 Formal Festive Renaissance attireâ to figure out if you want me to give Great Gatsby or King Arthur & the Knights of the Round Table.â
Ms Wright, 35, remains frustrated. The wedding of a college classmate had a âsmart, but not too smart casualâ dress code.
Renee Strauss, co-founder and CEO of the destination wedding planning company Wedaways in Beverly Hills, California, said wacky dress codes come down to couples striving to make their nuptials custom and unique.
âThe key is making sure thereâs communication behind the dress code. Donât just confuse guests,â she said.
When her company builds wedding websites for clients, it includes descriptions for dress codes such as âWine Country Chicâ, urging couples to offer a broad enough palette for people to express themselves. âTropical Formalâ, for instance, could be long, flowing dresses in bright summer colours and linen suits with playful ties.
âMost guests have a lot of fun with it,â Ms Strauss said.
Rikki Gotthelf, 32, in Los Angeles, attended a wedding recently and has three more this year. She was a bridesmaid for the âSpace Disco Cowboyâ nuptials of friends who shuttled their guests to an abandoned ghost town near Austin, Texas.

âWe had these shiny intergalactic Batsheva prairie dresses. Mine was iridescent,â Ms Gotthelf said. âAnother wedding I went to was âFunky Formalâ.â
For guidance, Ms Gotthelf turned to Sophie Strauss, who bills herself as a âstylist for regular peopleâ. Ms Strauss suggests following up with the couple if they have not made themselves clear.
âThey wonât be offended,â she said. âTheyâre invested enough in how everyone looks to have put forth a kooky dress code.â
One of her clients has a âMusic Festival Formalâ wedding coming up.
âHe clarified with the couple that itâs more Woodstock, less Burning Man. Good to know,â Ms Strauss said.
She implored guests staring down out-there dress codes to remember: âItâs not a costume. Unless, of course, itâs literally a costume party.â