Blog

The RBA in partnership with DYSB!

As of today, 1st October 2021, the RBA have officially joined forces with the fabulous Wendy Rivera and her DYSB team.

Over lockdown the DYSB team delivered a series of motivational training videos live and exclusive to our members and it soon became clear how much appetite there was for this support! Wendy is truly inspiring and motivational – pushing us to break those boundaries and take our shops, products and services to the NEXT LEVEL! Ultimately to help us ensure that our our brides experience is a truly memorable one when making such an important decision. Also it is vital to ensure our members stores are successful in the long-term, this can only lead to lots of very happy brides for years to come!

So we got busy chatting to Wendy and her amazing team and after some great discussions to work out what we can achieve together, we decided to officially collaborate and offer our members a new membership benefit that would truly bring value to their business and therefore to their customers! This is only the beginning for what we have planned and we cannot wait to see how this partnership develops.

Our aim is always to strive towards raising industry standards and customer experience. Working with our members to achieve this through continuous development and a community of support.

Find out more about Wendy Rivera and her team by checking out their website.

Fun Wedding Facts

Wedding Ring
  • The largest wedding attendance was a Jewish wedding in Jerusalem in 1993 where 30,000 people attended.
  • The most expensive wedding was the one held in a purpose-built stadium in Dubai for a Shiek’s son. The wedding cost over £22 million.
  • The longest wedding dress train was found in Germany, it measured over 515 feet.
  • Tuck a sugar cube into your glove — according to Greek culture, the sugar will sweeten your union.
  • Rain on your wedding day is actually considered good luck, according to Hindu tradition!
  • For good luck, Egyptian women pinch the bride on her wedding day. Ouch!
  • Peas are thrown at Czech newlyweds instead of rice.
  • A Swedish bride puts a silver coin from her father and a gold coin from her mother in each shoe to ensure that she’ll never do without.
  • A Finnish bride traditionally went door-to-door collecting gifts in a pillowcase, accompanied by an older married man who represented long marriage.
  • Moroccan women take a milk bath to purify themselves before their wedding ceremony.
  • In Holland, a pine tree can be planted outside the newlyweds’ home as a symbol of fertility and luck.
  • Engagement and wedding rings are worn on the fourth finger of the left hand because it was once thought that a vein in that finger led directly to the heart.
  • Diamonds set in gold or silver became popular as betrothal rings among wealthy Venetians toward the end of the fifteenth century.
  • Snake rings dotted with ruby eyes were popular wedding bands in Victorian England – the coils winding into a circle symbolized eternity.
  • Queen Victoria started the Western world’s white wedding dress trend in 1840 – before then, brides simply wore their best dress.
  • In Japan, white was always the color of choice for bridal ensembles -long before Queen Victoria popularized it in the Western world.
  • In Asia, wearing robes with embroidered cranes symbolizes fidelity for the length of a marriage.
  • In Korea, brides don bright hues of red and yellow to take their vows.
  • Ancient Greeks and Romans thought the veil protected the bride from evil spirits. Brides have worn veils ever since.
  • The “something blue” in a bridal ensemble symbolizes purity, fidelity, and love.
  • The tradition of a wedding cake comes from ancient Rome, where revelers broke a loaf of bread over a bride’s head for fertility’s sake.
  • The custom of tiered cakes emerged from a game where the bride and groom attempted to kiss over an ever-higher cake without knocking it over.
  • Queen Victoria’s wedding cake weighed a whopping 300 pounds.
  • Stag parties were first held by ancient Spartan soldiers, who kissed their bachelor days goodbye with a raucous party.

Internet & Home Sellers

Internet & Home Sellers

All of our RBA members sell original bridal gowns sourced directly from the corresponding designer.

Although these dresses may be supplied from many different sources, they all have one vital thing in common. They will have been made and designed to not only look good from the outside but to include the the necessary boning, lining, corsetry and underskirts that a ‘proper’ bridal gown needs to give it shape and fit.

In addition, they will be subject to a professional manufacturing process in which quality control is paramount. Each detail on the dress must tally up to any description made about it on publicity, including the fabric, beading etc. The designer will have had the dress professionally photographed, often at huge expense, and will have presented it to us the retailer in the form of fashion and trade-shows, where we will have had a chance to inspect the quality and finish of the gown before ordering our shop stock. As retailers we are also expected to adhere to UK laws about how we describe our goods, deal with our customers and how we deal with complaints.

Why are we telling you all of this?

Because over the last few years, following on from the tidal-wave of fake goods (watches bags etc) arriving on our shores, from a host of foreign factories, we have seen a huge rise in the number of fake wedding dresses being offered for sale on the Internet, and Facebook. Many of these copy sites use original designer pictures to make you think that you’ll be getting exactly the same dress that you tried on in your local bridal shop the week before, but at a fraction of the price.

If they turn up at all (and many never do) these dresses are often poor copies of the original designer gown, and will be made from inferior fabrics and often will be poorly cut, unboned and badly finished. As copies they are also infringing copyright and by selling them to you as a designer original, they are breaking the law.

In addition, such sites are not subject to UK trading legislation and promises regarding returns, refunds and quality complaints and often do not match current UK high street expectations if put to the test.

Sadly – what seems like a bargain often finishes as a nightmare as, by the time you have waited for this dress to arrive, you’ve often used up the ordering time you’d need to get an original made for you. There are of course genuine internet sellers selling second hand and end of line/ex-sample dresses – but please be careful – if it seems too good to be true then it probably is!

Buying from a home seller

Reputable bridal designers don’t deal with home traders – it’s that simple. There are wonderful dressmakers working from home, that’s a completely different thing, as is the practice of selling on end of lines and ex-samples, but outside of this, if it seems too good to be true then it probably is!

Find out more about Internet sellers in these first-hand stories.