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WEDDINGS

Pixie Lott’s Schiaparelli Couture Wedding Gown Felt Like “A Dream Come True”

Design & Planning by Alice Wilkes Design. Photography by Katie Julia

Once she had “done the impossible” by selecting her favourite of Roseberry’s sketches, the designer set to work. “I kept it a complete secret – even from my best friends,” confides Pixie. The only person to get a sneak peek was Pixie’s mum, who travelled with the bride to Paris after lockdown for fittings. 

The finished dress – the result of 650 hours of work on the Place Vendôme – is an ivory silk crepe and double satin gown, with a 4.5 metre-long train scattered with Swarovski seed beads. The bustier dress sits over a top created using an exclusive knitting technique, embellished with 20,000 nude seed beads. “It feels like a very Schiaparelli shape, but at the same time it feels unique,” says Pixie. “The first time I put it on I cried my eyes out, and so did my mum!”

In addition to two veils – one long, one short – the bride selected Roger Vivier shoes and diamonds by Knauf, as well as some Schiaparelli hair jewels. Make-up artist Caroline Barnes fulfilled Pixie’s beauty brief (“natural vibes, super fresh”), while hairstylist Larry King perfected her bridal up-do: a low bun with a few of her trademark curls falling loose. Pixie’s bridesmaids’ glam came care of Givenchy. 

Unsurprisingly, given Pixie’s pop pedigree, music was central to the couple’s wedding celebrations. Guests including Emma Thynn, Marchioness of Bath and Sabrina Elba were greeted by a violinist at the cathedral, and the bride and groom also hatched a plan to surprise the congregation with a flash mob-style gospel choir. “That’s not in the order of service!” Pixie says. 

Once the formalities were over, a roaming brass band accompanied guests as they made their way to a marquee brimming with spring flowers. “One thing I always knew I wanted was flowers absolutely everywhere,” says Pixie, who enlisted Sophie’s Flower Company to deliver the quintessentially English garden aesthetic she envisioned. The blooms were white, cream and yellow, to echo the pale sherbet lemon shade of the bridesmaid and flower girl dresses Pixie designed herself. The flower girl dresses were handmade in Madrid, and the bridesmaid dresses by Eliza May in the UK. The choice of lemon was a sweet nod to the colour scheme for Pixie’s parents’ wedding day. 

The bride’s Schiaparelli gown negated the need for a second party dress: it transformed to create an entirely new look for the reception. The train and beaded top were removed, resulting in a cocktail dress featuring the iconic Schiaparelli silhouette on the bust, and dramatic volume on the skirt. It was perfect for the party, which incorporated several live music performances as well as another surprise cooked up by the bride and groom: a hidden speakeasy. “We wanted a secret bar that people could happen across, separate to the party, with special cocktails and show girls,” she says. “We’ve waited so long for this wedding. I just wanted everyone to have the best time.”