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AITAH for not wearing the wedding dress my friend made me because I found my dream wedding dress in a thrift store
"Hello fellow potatoes! First time poster so please be kind.
I got married a year ago and I still feel like a horrible person so some outside perspective would be helpful. Here is some context:
My husband and I met in college in the same group of friends where we also met the "seamstress" of the group. She was an amateur seamstress so she asked the group for ideas on what to make for fun. She ended up making a lot of Halloween costumes and many beautiful gowns for recitals. (she did not major in fashion. It was just a hobby she loved) I never asked her to make costumes or dresses for me because I felt like I would have been using her."
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There are wedding disasters, wedding mishaps, wedding cold feet moments, and then there’s whatever category this falls into: accidentally ending up with two wedding dresses because you were too nice to hurt someone’s feelings.
Because this wasn’t some bridezilla demanding ten custom gowns and ghosting the seamstress afterward. This was two extremely considerate people trapped in a politeness battle so powerful that basic communication completely collapsed under the pressure.
The bride didn’t want to seem ungrateful. The friend didn’t want to pressure her for updates. Meanwhile the wedding itself quietly evolved into an elopement because planning the larger event became emotionally exhausting. By the time the handmade dress was finished, everyone involved was already moving entirely on vibes and delayed text messages.
Communication is important, but what's so adorable about this is that no one got mad. That’s the detail that really makes this story feel almost suspiciously wholesome for the internet. In most wedding-related stories, someone ends up screaming, crying, throwing cake, or at minimum starting a family group chat war that lasts six years. Here, the “conflict” is basically just one woman feeling guilty because of a big misunderstanding.
Even the seamstress friend comes across less like someone who got wronged and more like the final boss of emotional maturity. Imagine spending months making a wedding dress by hand, arriving at the reception, immediately realizing the bride is wearing a completely different gown, and still choosing peace. No passive-aggressive comments. No dramatic confrontation. Not even one visibly irritated expression captured in the background of a reception photo.
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03
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"At one point (in 2021) she surprised me and my husband (then boyfriend) with a beautiful costume set of Hiccup and Astrid from How to Train Your Dragon! We loved those costumes so much we wanted to pay her for her time but she never accepted it. We managed to slip a few 20s in her wallet and never said anything.
We absolutely love this girl but she never liked taking money from us because she emphasized that she was just an amateur.
Anyway, about 2 years before the wedding, I asked her if she would be willing to make my wedding dress. We had talked a lot about it before we got engaged but now it was real so the conversations got really long so some things may have gotten over looked."
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04
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"After the engagement, I moved away to a different town and she moved to a different state about a year before the wedding. We were able to make a mock up of the dress before we moved so we knew it would fit right.
Here is where I think I may be the AH.
About 6 months before the wedding, I had not seen what the dress looked like yet and was getting a little panicky about it. I texted my friend and asked for an update but hadn't received one for a while.
In the meantime, my husband and I were shopping around for the groomsmen/bridesmaid stuff. We wondered into one of my favorite thrift stores and I turned to see the EXACT dress I wanted, hanging on the wall. I ran over, grabbed it to go try it on. It fit like a glove. The only thing was that it was meant for a tall, like 6ft person, not a 5ft 2in person. Anyway, I digress."
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05
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"I was so excited about the dress that I tried to call and let my friend know that I had found exactly what I wanted, to not worry about it anymore and shower her with kindness and gratitude but she never answered me.
About 3 months go by and my husband and I had a long conversation about the wedding. I told him that I was so anxious about it all, especially the wedding night and all the people that would be there, that it was making it hard to keep planning or going through with it. He came up with a plan to elope (we'd have the reception on our original wedding date).
Ironically enough, that solution worked! Roughly 2 months before the wedding date, it was just us two, our parents and some siblings and our closest friends at the elopement. No one else knew we were married but the ones that were there. It was perfect. I wore my dress I found in the thrift store, and a beautiful flower crown my mom had.
A week after the elopement, I finally hear back from my friend. She said that she finished the dress!"
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06
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That level of restraint deserves its own award category.
And honestly, the thrift-store dress twist makes the whole thing even funnier in a cosmic way. Of course the perfect dress appeared randomly while she was stressed out. That’s exactly how wedding stories work. Either everything falls magically into place, or someone ends up crying in a parking lot over chair covers. There is no middle ground.
The ripped zipper later in the night also feels less like sabotage and more like the universe softly tapping the bride on the shoulder and saying, “Maybe we stop making decisions for today.”
At the end of it all, though, the important thing survived: the friendship. Nobody weaponized guilt, nobody made the wedding about themselves, and nobody let a dress become bigger than the relationship attached to it.
Which is surprisingly refreshing to read online, where wedding stories usually end with someone getting uninvited forever over centerpieces.
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07
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"I was surprised and grateful that she finished it. I never asked if she got my messages from a while ago but I was excited all the same because she had spent time and money on this gown for me. We talked, I gave her my address and sent her money for the dress (and then some). I decided that it wasn't necessary to tell her that she didn't need to send it to me so I carried on like that was the dress I would wear.
The day of the reception comes and we are partying it up with friends and family. I am in the dress I found, and my friend is dancing along side us. I'm pretty sure she noticed that I wasn't wearing the dress she made me but never said anything or even looked at me weird. She has the biggest heart and just let me be. I did, however, change into a part of the dress she made. In the making of the dress, I wanted a pull-away skirt so I could dance comfortably the rest of the night."
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08
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"When I pulled it out of the box I realized that part of the zipper and the modesty panel had ripped off. I went out and talked to my husband and he said that I should just stay in my big dress for the rest of the night and not say anything. I agreed. I don't know what happened to the dress. I HIGHLY doubt anyone sabotaged it and I know for sure that my friend didn't know where it was anyway.
The night went on without a hitch and we are happily married.
AITAH for not wearing the wedding dress my friend made me?"
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09
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NTA, I mean, you had no info about the dress until a few weeks before the wedding. You do not live in the same town, could you have known it would be ready in time ? Or exactly as you wanted without communication ? She could have responded with simple updates like : "bought the tissu, wanna see ?" "Mockup done, what do you think ?" "Embellishments, still on the same page as we planned or you changed ideas ?"
A wedding is stressful and you can have doubts about many things (point in case with your elopment lol). I don't know the extent of your attempts at communication with her, but with such an important project as a wedding dress it can not go lacking. Maybe as a compensation you could offer to reimburse her for the materials at the very least, or try to convert one of the dresses in a new/more wearable version ?
Anyways, congratulations to you ! Hope you have a nice, stressfree and fulfilling marital life
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From the info you're providing, NTA - but I'm not sure we're hearing the whole story.
For example, you say you eloped, but you describe a destination wedding with family. So it's hard for me to believe that you texted her politely or that the dress was damaged the way you describe when you're clearly making up dramatics about something as straightforward as a ceremony
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I think you have an out. Tell her it was unwearable but you found a dress at an op shop instead
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NTA if you explain to her that the dress she made was damaged and you only discovered it when you went to do your dress change at the reception.
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How did the special gown get so damaged?
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I’m not even gonna read this girl it’s your wedding.
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NTA - It sounds like you made every effort to contact your friend regarding the dress she was making and eventually came up with a perfect solution. It also sounds like you're incredibly grateful for your friend for all of her efforts AND compensated her for her work (with extra $$), so you did all you could do. Finding an alternative that perfectly fit your vision/dream for your big day seems like a VERY reasonable outcome. Hopefully your friend understands and your friendship remains unscathed.
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