Bridal fashion moves more slowly than ready-to-wear. A trend that appears on the runway in October will show up on real brides two to three years later, after it has filtered through designer collections, boutique buyers, and the long timelines of gown ordering. Here is what is actually showing up at Dallas weddings right now, and how Margo West helps brides either embrace or adapt these trends to their specific vision.
Minimalist Silk Gowns
The most significant trend of the last three years: clean, unembellished gowns in silk crepe, silk charmeuse, or bias-cut satin. These gowns make a statement through fabric quality and fit rather than decoration. They photograph differently than embellished gowns. The photography becomes about the bride rather than the dress. And in Dallas venues that range from the warm lighting of a historic mansion to the cool modernity of a rooftop space, a minimalist silk gown adapts beautifully to any context.
The alteration implication: minimalist gowns show every imperfection in fit. There is nowhere to hide. The line of the seam, the fall of the hem, the way the bust sits. All of it is visible. Brides who choose minimalist gowns should prioritize couture-quality fitting above almost every other consideration.
Sculptural Necklines
Sweetheart necklines have been the default for years. What is replacing them is a range of architectural alternatives: asymmetric single-shoulder necklines, draped cowl necklines, deep V constructions, and portrait necklines that create a frame around the collarbone. These are more complex to construct and require more precise alteration, but they create images that are immediately distinctive.

Overskirts and Detachable Elements
The two-look wedding dress is not new, but it has become more sophisticated. Detachable overskirts that convert a ballgown to a sleek column for the reception. Sleeves that come off between ceremony and reception. Trains that can be bustled into a different silhouette entirely. The idea is one gown, two complete looks, without any costume-change drama.
This is a design challenge we love at Margo West. Creating detachable elements that look intentional and attach invisibly is genuine couture work. Read our guide to detachable bridal elements for detail on how this is done.
Corset Bodices
The corset bodice trend arrived in bridal after several seasons in ready-to-wear. Boned, lace-up backs, structured internal construction. Corset bodices create an extremely defined waist and an elevated posture. They are not comfortable for all body types, and the fit requirements are precise. But when done well, the corset silhouette is one of the most timelessly beautiful in bridal.

What Margo West Recommends
Regardless of which trend appeals to you, our consistent recommendation is the same: choose a gown that reflects how you actually dress and what makes you genuinely feel beautiful. Trends are useful as inspiration and context. They are not a mandate. A Dallas bride who has never worn a puff sleeve in her life will not suddenly feel like herself in a dramatic bishop sleeve gown just because it is on trend.
Your aesthetic is the starting point. The trend conversation happens after that foundation is established. Book a consultation at Margo West to discuss your gown vision with someone who has been doing this work for forty years.





