Olivia Culpo |
Olivia Culpo and Christian McCaffrey, who recently tied the knot, are replying to a commenter who took issue with Olivia's wedding gown concept.
After being married on Saturday, June 29, Olivia Culpo and Christian McCaffrey wasted no time in replying to a fashion stylist who made fun of their Dolce Gabanna long sleeve wedding dress on social media.
In a video that she shared earlier this week on TikTok and Instagram, content producer Kennedy Bingham said, "I have been a bridal maker for four years now, and I have never said this before— but, I do not like this wedding dress."Olivia Culpo recently got married, and this is a great example of how fashion is much more than just what looks good.
"Everything around the dress that leaves kind of a bitter aftertaste," she continued. She went beyond simply wanting something modest for herself and pushing this idea of what she thinks all brides should look like when she said, "I didn't want to exude sex in any way." She also said, "I wanted the dress to be as serious as she takes the covenant of marriage."
The 32-year-old model revealed that she had been working with Dolce and Gabanna to create three looks for her special day, which her loved ones were able to experience. "I wanted it to feel classic, carefree, and like it's enhancing rather than overpowering me." "There's so much simplicity and beauty," she said to Vogue.
The previous pageant winner commented on TikTok, "Wow, what an absolutely evil person you are," after seeing this video and being outraged. I hope no one ever breaks you apart the way it hurts. I love this dress, it's all I could have ever wanted.
Olivia Culpo and Christian McCaffrey tied the knot in Rhode Island, where they both grew up, in a gorgeous wedding
Olivia's choice to emphasise a comment on her eyelashes rather than highlight the designer's "long, history of homophobia and racism" prompted the influencer to respond with a clap of her own. wrote Kennedy, "So we just aren't going to acknowledge the background of the designers you're supporting or how your words come across to other people?"
In response, the user on Instagram received criticism from her 28-year-old spouse, who said, "What a horrible thing to post online." I wish you could live a happy and contented life, like my beautiful spouse does.
Kennedy had earlier said in the video that she liked the clothing but did not like the way it was thought of. She replied to the NFL player with the remark "@christianmccaffrey." Thus, what is so evil about calling attention to your (in my view) patriarchal comment, the potential internalised misogyny that underlies her logic, and the history of racism, homophobia, and fatphobia among the designers she worked with?
0 comments:
Post a Comment