Here’s What 11 Vogue Editors Are Wearing to Their Summer Weddings
From all-black ensembles to floor-sweeping chartreuse styles.

Reported by Vogue.
Wedding guest dressing is a contact sport, and if you've spent more than twenty minutes spiraling over what to wear to someone else's big day, you're not alone — even Vogue editors do it. According to Vogue, eleven of their staffers shared exactly what they're wearing this summer, and the range is genuinely useful: no matching-set uniformity, no single "safe" answer. Just real women with real dress codes navigating real RSVPs.
The throughline? Black is never wrong. Multiple editors are reaching for it — a vintage Jil Sander column gown sourced from The RealReal for a black-tie affair in Tuscany, a sleek Fforme skirt with a structured swish, a beaded bag to add texture without the color commitment. Fashion market director Maddy Fass, who attended four weddings last summer, kept her accessories identical across every event: a heeled sandal, a drop earring, a pretty pouch. That kind of system thinking is the real editorial flex.
When the dress code demands more
For the editors with specific mandates — blush bridesmaid duties, "aloha chic" in Hawaii, colorful cocktail in an unspecified city — the approach shifted toward intentionality over formula. Lifestyle editor Elly Leavitt chose a gossamer Habotai silk gown from Temily with a plunging neckline and vintage Manolo Blahnik kitten heels worn soft enough to dance in. Associate commerce producer Fred Sahai pivoted from black-tie to tropical, landing on a Rixo dress and Maryam Nassir Zadeh wedges after the venue confirmed grass terrain. Beauty shopping writer Conçetta Ciarlo, a self-described reluctant wedding attendee clocking in as a bridesmaid three times over, set one firm rule: only buy pieces worth restyling later. Smart.
The editors also proved that destination and re-wearability aren't mutually exclusive. A sequined Saint Art mini is doing double duty in the South of France. A chocolate brown TWP gown is being clocked for fall with a wardrobe swap. A Siedrés dress is making the trip to a castle outside Dublin before coming home for closer celebrations. The investment is in the piece, not the occasion.
The real takeaway from eleven editors with eleven different weddings: commit to a formula you trust — whether that's always black, always a statement earring, always re-wearable — and let everything else follow.
Read the original at Vogue.


