English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-11-19 04:51:42 · 30 answers · asked by 6th Finger 2 in Family & Relationships Weddings

30 answers

Are you gonna volunteer to be the virginity police????

2006-11-19 04:53:45 · answer #1 · answered by snvffy 7 · 3 0

Speaking as an historian: It is a falsehood that white historically implies virginity.

White became the wedding color only after Queen Victoria wore it to marry Prince Albert in the 1830s. It was considered a break with tradition.

Traditionally, women wore the most popular color of the day or which ever color looked best on them. The wedding gown has always been a woman's 'best' dress and one she would wear again. Hence, white was not often chosen because it showed too much dirt to permit it to be worn over and over. If you read the women's magazines of the 19th century, even after Victoria, most brides were being married in burgundies, dark green, dark blues and even black (esp common in certain ethnicities, such as German). Even for royalty, brocades and other materials conveying wealth through gold threads and dark, rich colors were preferred. White appeared as a wedding color in the 1890s and through the 1920s. With the Depression and WWII, however, economic and war-time privations, saw a return to simpler and more practical dress and most women wore their wedding suits and dresses time and time again. In the 1950s, the 'traditional' white wedding gown appeared (and was actually an updated copy of the 1890s style gowns).

Moreover, white as a color historically was associated with fertility, NOT virginity since there is no way of knowing if virgin will be fertile.

It is only within the last 60 years or so that the notion of white=virginity has taken hold.

2006-11-19 06:47:58 · answer #2 · answered by Karen L 3 · 3 1

Oh..the color of the gown must be the most suitable of any ones difficulty at a wedding ceremony. I have a larger issue with those who destroy each and every vow they recited interior of a few years of having hitched. that is a larger difficulty. the marriage is purely an hour out of an rather lengthy existence mutually. Its no enormous deal. Its the sentiment in the back of the custom it really is major. fortunately married for 13 years (mutually 18) and why is it extremely any of your difficulty who's and is not a virgin?? honestly that is only a count number for the individuals worried and The Maker. i imagine you sound too worried with the trivial, once you may be putting your solid mind to apply honestly assisting people, fairly of dropping it being judgemental. this I see as extra of a sin. and for the list, some others are good. White has purely been a 'style' in wedding ceremony dresses for the previous one hundred fifty years or so. A white wedding ceremony gown replaced into considered extra as a press release of wealth and prosperity, maximum women people married of their 'sunday best' (likely gray, as a logo of humbleness) and white, esp lace, confirmed the kinfolk had funds, whcih replaced into appealing to the potential grooms kinfolk. Blue has continually been a logo of purity contained in the Christian church. that is the reason mom Mary is continually depicted wearing blue gowns and females people placed on a blue token (ribbon or broach or garter) on their wedding ceremony day. people now and again dont like the reality even as is conflicts with their beliefs that they carry pricey.

2016-11-29 06:53:45 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Of course. Do you really think all the women in all the weddings you've seen in pictures wearing white wedding gowns are virgins?

2006-11-19 04:54:17 · answer #4 · answered by Heidi from California 2 · 3 1

The color white has absolutely nothing to do with virginity or purity. It was a symbol of wealth as no one but royalty could afford to purchase a white dress that would never be worn again. Over the years, the meaning behind it became corrupted into something else entirely.

So your question is moot. The bride should wear whatever color she wants, not what society dictates based on false pretenses. A large number of women actually do not look flattering in any shade of white or ivory.

If you want to follow tradition and be old-fashioned, wear a colored dress (blue, red, green, gold, etc) as that was the original custom.

2006-11-19 05:03:49 · answer #5 · answered by Cinnamon 6 · 4 2

Now days I don't think it matters anymore, in all honesty how many brides are actually virgins when they are married, and I'm not meaning this in a rude way, but with the divorce/ remarriage rate..also look at how many questions there are with young girls asking for help because they are pregnant. Wear what you want to wear, the dress in my opinion should be the one that when you put it on it takes your breath away, the one that makes you feel like a princess.

2006-11-19 07:13:10 · answer #6 · answered by Kitikat 6 · 1 1

If only virgins were to wear white on their wedding day you would not see very many white weddings.

Maybe that's why guys wear black?

We wear black at funerals, too.

Is that a coincidence?

2006-11-19 06:11:04 · answer #7 · answered by deepndswamps 5 · 2 0

I had ask this question to some family members and this is what they told me. If you are not a virgin but are going to marry the only man that you have been with it is ok. If you have been sleeping with many different man then you shouldn't wear white.

2006-11-19 12:04:06 · answer #8 · answered by needanswers 3 · 1 1

White is tradition for first weddings, therefore ANY first time bride is so entitled. Any bride can wear white, of course, but it's more usual for a second wedding to be less formal and more colourful.
It is vulgar to even speculate on the condition of the bride's body.

2006-11-19 04:59:40 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Hi theres no rule! This is not the 15th century and its no ones business if the bride is a virgin or not! She can wear any color she likes but most prefer white or cream

2006-11-19 05:00:45 · answer #10 · answered by jojo 6 · 2 1

Sure, why not? I know the tradition is that the white gown signifies that the bride's a virgin, but waiting till marriage isn't that comon any more. Brides should be able to wear what they want. Are you going to give them a gynocological exam to check when you see one wearing white?

2006-11-19 07:54:32 · answer #11 · answered by K S 4 · 0 3

fedest.com, questions and answers