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The Women Behind the Wedding Dress Ball Event

On April 18th, Memphis will host the first Wedding Dress Ball in the U.S. Known and held overseas in the United Kingdom, the trademarked event is a party where, simply put, women get an excuse to wear their wedding dress again.

“All of the fun, great food, dancing; none of the pressure,” says Brittney Andres-Rossi of Over Easy Events. When describing the origin of the idea before finding anything of its kind, she explained, “I was attending a friend’s wedding admiring her wedding dress with a table of ladies – the details, the buttons. We then talked about our own wedding dresses, continuing on for almost an hour. If we talked that long about them, I thought, ‘Why not wear them again?’”

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With the Wedding Dress Ball, attendees can revive that feeling of grandeur in a dramatic gown, whether it’s the dress from that wedding day, their dream wedding dress, a creatively altered wedding dress, a ball gown, or a bridesmaid’s dress.

When Brittney sought a venue for an event like this, she immediately thought of Propcellar Vintage Rentals and the open warehouse space. “It has that certain modern feel that I wanted, and I couldn’t imagine [the party] anywhere else,” says Brittney. Propcellar owner Karlee Hickman recently renovated the space for storing her vintage props but also designed it to host special events.

Event sponsor Maggie Louise Bridal Boutique will be assisting those in the category of attending with their “dream wedding dress.” Owner Molly Farrell is hosting trunk shows and sample sales leading up to the event. The boutique also carries bridal accessories like jewelry, headpieces, and sashes to help revamp one’s wedding dress look or create a look they didn’t have a chance to wear before.  

Overall, the event is a reason to celebrate something – being married, single, or divorced. “Someone recently divorced said they are coming to celebrate their freedom,” says Brittney smiling with admiration. Plus, the event raises money for charity. This year, the event will benefit St. Mary’s Soup Kitchen which serves meals to the poor and homeless in downtown Memphis. It is the oldest continuously operating soup kitchen in the country.

Other vendors and partners include Everbloom Designs and CFY Catering. Kristin Wolter-Canfield of Everbloom Designs will be providing the floral designs. CFY Catering will serve hors d’oeuvres and colorless cocktails to avoid wedding dress stains. Event activities include mad-lib vow renewals, a “wedding party pose” photo booth, and hand-lettered anniversary henna tattoos by Baltic Studios Calligraphy.

Limited tickets are on sale now. Purchase them at www.weddingdressball.org or www.weddingdressball.eventbrite.com.

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Karlee, Brittney, and Molly wear the dresses from their wedding day. Shoot location: Propcellar. All photos by Sophorn Kuoy.

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Karlee Hickman, Propcellar Vintage Rentals

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“Look for new and interesting ideas, move outside your comfort zone a little — fitting in isn’t always a good thing!”

California-native Karlee Hickman moved to Memphis with her husband, a FedEx pilot, four years ago. It was a big move in many ways — geographically and culturally, certainly outside her comfort zone.

“I’m independent, but after a couple of months, I had a distinctive dark moment where I consciously had to make the decision sink or swim. Sink — meaning give up and go back to my family and friends in California or swim — meaning make the most of it and get out there and start making some roots,” she recalls.

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Even at the beginning of her big transition, she could tell there was potential in the city. “I told my husband, “You mark my words. Give it 10 years and Memphis is going to be on those ‘Top 10 Cool Places’ lists.”

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For Karlee, making roots wasn’t about fitting in. It was about making connections and letting her entrepreneurial spirit contribute something unique to the growth happening all around the city. She was so inspired that she gave her new attitude its own tagline — “Memphis Proud.”

“Memphis Proud embodies the spirit of the renaissance that’s happening all around us right now. Memphis is cool place full of character and soul and enormous opportunity. Yes, my family and I happened to end up here. But that’s changed and now we know better and are choosing to be here. We’re proud to call this city our home and proud to be even a small part of the awakening that it’s experiencing.”

After a few odd jobs as a waitress, a bartender, a nanny, and an au pair in Sweden, Karlee took her Fashion Design/Apparel Production education and interior design background with her love for collecting vintage furniture and created something almost unpredictable as a business — renting out vintage furniture and décor as props. Propcellar Vintage Rentals was born in 2013 from one couch she found at a yard sale then refurbished with aqua blue fabric and red legs.

The inventory grew with more and more requests to provide props for weddings, photo shoots, parties, and film productions.

Now Propcellar has a new home in a converted glass factory on Summer Avenue that channels the energy of the Broad Avenue arts district just south of their building. With 10,000 square feet of space, Karlee has seized the chance to not only store more inventory to rent but hopes to rent out the space itself for parties and photo shoots.

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For the building restoration, Karlee enlisted interior designer Natalie Lieberman of Collect + Curate. Careful detailing and new lighting upgrade the space without losing any of the mid-century character. The showroom portion of the building hopes to be complete and open by early September.

In the hectic schedule of this major build-out, Karlee balances time as a mom of two young kids. “Balance is a generous word,” she jokes. Knowing she’s not exclusive to this day-to-day dilemma of finding time is part of the Propcellar service of saving their customers time in finding that perfect piece. She has taken many requests to find anything she doesn’t currently have in stock.

Her eye for style and vintage design doesn’t stop at furniture or interiors. Her design philosophy also evolves into personal style. “Editing is the most important step in any design process, be it clothes, interior or event design. Fabulous color selection is an art and makes all the difference in the world.”

And her style advice? Confidence. “Nothing looks as good as confidence. A gal is unstoppable with a great moisturizer, YSL Touché Eclat, blush, lip gloss, sunglasses, caffeine…and wine.”

Details
Dress: Vintage. Purchased from Twisted Vintage Textiles “right here in good old Memphis!”
Shoesies: Chelsea Crew. modcloth.com.
Necklace: Anthropologie
Earrings: Southern Couture
Prop and shoot location: Jens Mid Century Chair, Propcellar Vintage Rentals.