The end of the effortless era: Spring 2027 bridal trends from the runway
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The end of the effortless era: Spring 2027 bridal trends from the runwayThe end of the effortless era: Spring 2027 bridal trends from the runway
Image / Style / Weddings

Photography by Anna J Ray, Berta Couture

The end of the effortless era: Spring 2027 bridal trends from the runway


by IMAGE
19th Apr 2026

IMAGE wedding contributor and content creator Kellie Brierly-Kind recently attended New York Bridal Fashion Week, where statement silhouettes and intricate details dominated the runway. Here are the trends to expect for spring/summer 2027 brides.

I spent a week racing between appointments from Soho to Midtown for New York Bridal Fashion Week, and if there is one thing I can tell you from the front lines, it is this: the cool bride has officially left the building.

For the last few years, bridal fashion has been dominated by a 90s-inspired restraint. It was all about the slip dress and a studied nonchalance that whispered of a bride who just happened to look this good. But across the Spring/Summer 2027 bridal collections, the shift is undeniable. We are trading ease for intention.

While at the Ines Di Santo show, the debut of the V Veronica line felt like a hard reset for the industry, signalling a move toward architectural art over simple softness.

The bride is no longer softening the moment; she is the frame for it. From the return of “new maximalism” to fabrics that defy tradition, here are the five key trends defining this new main-character era.

The rise of liquid minimalism

Minimalism is evolving into something far more substantial and luxurious. Walking into Australian bridal designer KYHA Studios’ New York flagship, where the floor was blanketed in sand as a nod to the raw silica shores of Australia, the aesthetic shift was immediate.

This season is not about the barely there look; it is about precision and density. I will be honest: I have never felt a fabric quite like this in person. The gowns literally felt like butter, a weight and drape that felt more like a second skin than a garment. There is a clear move toward liquid aesthetics where double satins catch the light in a way that looks almost molten against the matte texture of the sand-filled room. These gowns are engineered with couture-level corsetry hidden beneath a buttery exterior, offering a sensory luxury that pictures cannot quite capture.

The forecast: Expect to see precision minimalism defined by creamy ivory tones and light reflecting finishes. Watch for envelope and wave necklines that evoke a sense of sculptural grace.

The power silhouette and the basque reset

One of the most discussed shifts in the showrooms this week was the definitive return of the power silhouette. We are moving away from the loose, ethereal shapes of the last decade and toward a look that is unapologetically sculpted.

The dominant language here is the basque waistline – pictured here in Berta Couture’s new collection. On the runways, we saw basque waist bustiers paired with dramatic trumpet skirts and high-low tufted organza to create a snatched, powerful frame. Designs like the Mirage and the Mistral stood out for their use of Italian Mikado and hard boned drop waists, proving that volume is no longer just about being pretty. It is about precision. This is romance reconstructed through a lens of modern strength.

The vibe: High fashion authority. This is for the bride who wants to feel held in a dress that offers 360-degree support and a sharply defined waist.

Photography by Anna J Ray.

Ethereal constructional lace

The mood at appointments like Alena Leena (a creative bridal studio based in both Cape Town and Ukraine) suggested that even romance is getting a structural update. As the New York sun beamed through the glass, it became clear that lace is no longer being used as a simple overlay; it is becoming the architecture of the dress itself. This is a move toward constructional texture.

The focus for 2027 is on intricate 3D effect lacework that builds transparency and pattern directly into the silhouette. With every movement, the light catches the layered depth of the fabric, creating an emotional wearability that feels both ancient and entirely new.

The Forecast: Structural layered lace that catches the light with high definition clarity is the new romantic standard. Look for whisper-weight layering that creates a dimensional effect without adding unnecessary bulk.

Sculptural volume and new maximalism

If there was one word used more than any other in the showrooms this season, it was maximalism. However, this is not the chaotic, over-embellished look of the past. Spring 2027 is ushering in a new maximalism rooted in spatial authority and architectural confidence.

As seen at Dutch designers Viktor and Rolf’s Mariage collection, produced in partnership with Justin Alexander, skirts are now holding their form with a sculptural, almost static rigidity. These pieces read closer to wearable installations than garments. This trend is about a controlled occupation of space using stiffer fabrics like Italian Mikado and heavy silk Radzimir. These materials allow the dress to hold a graphic shape even when the bride is standing perfectly still. It demands that the room adjust to the bride, not the other way around.

The forecast: Forget traditional tulle. Look for structural volume where the fabric itself does the heavy lifting. The dress is not just in the room; it is the room.

Dimensional texture and 3D florals

The final piece of this era is texture that refuses to stay flat. Surface treatment has moved decisively into three-dimensional territory, pushing the boundaries of what bridal embellishment can be. Designers are increasingly treating florals as physical extensions of a gown’s architecture rather than just decoration.

In Ines De Santo’s collection, we saw hand-tufted silk and laser-cut petals used to create a 360-degree visual experience that feels tactile and high impact. Whether it is the Nymphia gown or a structured floral bodice, the goal is to make the dress look different from every single angle.

The finish: Keep accessories minimal. When the texture is this loud, the dress is the accessory. 3D appliqués will scale up, moving from scattered petals to sculpted blooms.

The verdict: intention is everything

The takeaway from New York is that true impact is the result of visible decision-making. Whether it is a molten, buttery drape, impressionist-inspired ripples, or sun-catching lace, Spring 2027 is about presence over disappearance. We want to be seen. We want to take up space. The Main Character era is not about vanity. It is about the confidence to be the centre of your own story, framed by fabrics that are as strong as they are beautiful.

For more wedding inspiration, check out our IMAGE Weddings Hub.

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