Life & Style

How To Pick the Color of Your Bridesmaids’ Dresses

todayFebruary 11, 2026 63 2

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Choosing bridesmaids’ dress colors affects cohesion, photography, and the overall polish of the wedding. This decision works best when it follows a logical order rather than trend pressure. Color reacts to environment, people, and lighting long before it reads as “pretty.” The five tips below detail how to select the color of your bridesmaids’ gowns.

Compliment the Venue

Your bridesmaids’ dress color should feel like it belongs in the space, not like it was chosen separately. A formal ballroom calls for structured, polished colors such as navy, emerald, black, or deep wine because these shades complement the room’s elegance and scale.

Softer colors often work better for outdoor and garden weddings because they blend naturally with the environment without overpowering it. For instance, sage, dusty blue, soft blush, and champagne feel cohesive in spaces surrounded by greenery or open air.

Seasonality Matters

Another tip for selecting a color for your bridesmaids’ dresses is to consider the season. Certain hues naturally feel out of place depending on the time of year, especially once you see them in photos.

Soft blush tones can feel fresh and romantic in spring, but the same color often looks washed out against winter lighting and darker surroundings. Similarly, deep shades like burgundy or forest green feel rich in fall but can look heavy and overly formal under bright summer sun.

Colors Influence the Vibe

Bridesmaids’ dress colors play a major role in how formal, romantic, or relaxed a wedding feels. Deep tones like navy, black, or wine immediately signal a more polished, evening-style event, while softer shades such as blush, sage, or champagne create a lighter, more romantic atmosphere.

Understanding the color psychology of bridesmaid gowns comes down to knowing what emotions different hues evoke. For example, while blues and greens project calm and restraint, muted pinks support romance. Likewise, structured, darker tones like black, wine, and deep navy convey formality and confidence.

Account for Skin Tone Variation

Bridesmaids rarely share the same skin tone, so forcing them to match an exact shade is risky. Choosing a color family rather than a single color allows each bridesmaid to wear a shade that flatters her complexion while keeping the group cohesive. Shades like navy, emerald, plum, terracotta, and dusty rose tend to work well across a range of skin tones, making them safer, more polished choices.

Do What You Love

Once you narrow your options to a few colors that actually make sense for your wedding, stop reopening the list. Second-guessing leads to compromises, and compromises rarely look intentional. Pick the color that fits your setting and your style, then lock it in.

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Written by: Partner Contributor

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