Last Saturday, July 8, one of the most anticipated weddings of the year took place, the wedding between Tamara Falcó and Íñigo Onieva. The couple celebrated their big day at the emblematic El Rincón palace, in Madrid, with no more and no less than 400 guests, who were able to witness one of the most high-profile unions in recent times.

After months full of controversy and continuous setbacks, the Marquise de Griñón and the businessman were able to seal their love in style, with a dream weekend, in which there was no lack of music, exquisite gastronomy and great measures of security, all this to keep secret one of the great unknowns of the link, Tamara Falcó’s wedding dress.

Thanks to the exclusive of the magazine Hello! Last Monday, July 10, we were able to see for the first time the dress that Isabel Preysler’s daughter had chosen for her big day. The styling was designed by West Gordon, creative director of Carolina Herrera, in record time. And it is that after the contractual break with the Spanish firm Sophie et Voilà, due to a series of disagreements among which was an alleged plagiarism of a Chanel design, the influencer had to start the search for her dress again.

The design chosen by Falcó was a classic and sophisticated dress, with a bateau neckline, with a handmade embroidery of metal threads on the shoulders, which followed a row of buttons that reached the end of the suit. His choice has been highly commented both in the media and on social networks. For this reason, a pattern designer, @asundominguezmoda, wanted to give her most sincere opinion about the dress on her social networks.

”We can assess the dress from two perspectives, one from the aesthetics and the other from the technical part of the dress,” he began by saying. ”The aesthetic part, she is a marquise, she has married in a palace and is going to be a queen,” she declared. The patroness confessed that it was a very classic, timeless dress and above all closely related to royalty. ”That’s why everyone is comparing her to Queen Letizia,” she commented.

”Technically speaking it’s fantastic. It is a v-neckline, it is off the shoulder, and the sleeve is mounted on a very narrow shoulder. It means that the shoulders do not hold the dress,” he assured.

”By having vertical cuts and not at the waist, twice as much fabric is spent. It is true that vertical cuts help to fit better if the bride loses weight or gains weight, but it is the only advantage, everything else is much more technically complicated to do,” he asserted. The pattern designer assured that the row of buttons in the front were simply a fucking decoration and that the dress would surely have a zipper in the back. ”Technically speaking, it seems to me to be 10,” she concluded.