"Made to measure" and "made to order" are two of the most misused terms in bridal fashion. Many brands use them interchangeably — they're not the same. Knowing the difference could be one of the most important things you learn before you buy a wedding dress.
What Is Made to Order?
Made to order means the dress is not pre-made and sitting in a warehouse — it's produced when you place your order. However, it's still made to standard sizes. You choose your closest size from a size chart, the dress is constructed in that size, and any adjustments to fit come later through alterations.
This is the most common model for online wedding dress retailers. The production happens fresh, but the fit is not personalised to your body.
What Is Made to Measure?
Made to measure means the dress is constructed to your specific measurements from the beginning. You provide a complete set of body measurements — bust, waist, hips, height, hollow to hem etc.— and the pattern is adjusted so that every seam, every panel, every proportion is calculated for your body specifically.
The dress that arrives should fit you without significant alterations. The fit is built in, not achieved afterwards.
Why Does It Matter?
For most clothing, made-to-order is fine. For a wedding dress — which is typically a structured garment that needs to hold itself up, support the body, and look precise from every angle — the difference is significant.
A corset that's made to your waist measurement will sit where it should and feel like support. A corset made to a standard size and then altered may sit slightly differently, and alterations to structured boning are complex and expensive.
A mermaid dress made to your hip measurement will hug at the right point. The same dress in a standard size may fall at the wrong place on your thigh regardless of how well it's altered at the waist.
How We Work
Every gown we create is made to your exact measurements — not to a standard size. After you order, we contact you for a complete measurement list, and the pattern is adjusted accordingly before a single piece of fabric is cut.
This is why our production time is 3–5 months. A dress made to your body takes longer than a dress made to a size chart. The result is a gown that fits without significant alterations.
If you have questions about our process, speak with our designer directly — she guides every bride through the measurement and fitting process personally.