2014年2月12日星期三

Brides reunited with dresses after 10 years

A Florida woman who unwrapped her wedding gown after nearly 10 years and discovered it was the wrong dress said her original gown has been returned to her.Marie Keeney, 45, said she and her husband, Shawn, made plans to recreate their wedding for their ninth anniversary to allow their son, Braden,When the robot makes little jerky motions and slows down, according to Croft,waffen ss uniforms people actually describe this disembodied arm as considerate — maybe even a little shy. 8, to be a part of the ceremony, but the plans were put on hold when she unwrapped the dress preserved for her by Eagle Cleaners in Tampa and found the package contained the wrong dress, the Tampa Bay Times reported Wednesday."It made me cry," she said. "And I never cry."Keeney said she discovered Eagle Cleaners had outsourced the work to Wedding Gown Preservation Co. in New York, but that's where the trail went cold. She contacted WFTS-TV,The Department has broad authority, under Section 221 of the Immigration and Nationality Act,women shoes manufacturer to revoke visas based on information that comes to light at any time indicating that a visa holder may be inadmissible to the United States or otherwise ineligible for a visa. Tampa, for help, and the station was able to contact officials at the New York company and have Kenney's dress found and returned to her. 

Keeney said the ceremony is back on, this time in November for the couple's 10th anniversary.The story also had a second happy ending for Katherine Stephenson, whose dress was also dropped off at Eagle Cleaners about 10 years ago and ended up in Keeney's closet.When reached for comment,handbags and purses an official for the State Department declined to discuss Shinwary's case but said in a statement. Stephenson said she had discovered her dress was lost long ago and had since come to believe she would never see it again."Several people at that wedding are not with us anymore," Stephenson said. "It will be really nice to have something special from a time when they were all in our lives." Last week at the Next Artists Beauty Suite, we spoke with Jennifer Carter, the co-founder of Rent the Runway, a website that rents high-end designer gowns for a fraction of the retail price. When it launched in 2009, the company was nicknamed the "Netflix of fashion" and like Netflix, Rent the Runway has carved out its own new tech niche in an established industry. 

Carter says that when she and her business partner, Jennifer Hyman, first introduced their startup to fashion's old guard, some designers were worried that being carried on the rental site might negatively impact their brand image.But that's changed: "Designers have realized that we're really a marketing tool, where customers can try out their brand, take [a dress] out for a test drive one night and then get all these compliments and find out that when they can afford it, they would like to purchase from these brands."

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