Cambodia’s young and increasingly urbanized population and the growth
of a wealthier, more consumerist culture has created a blossoming
marriage industry catering to more sophisticated tastes and customers
who seek to set themselves apart from the crowd.
At the Sofitel
Phnom Penh Phokeethra on Saturday and Sunday, the hotel hosted its third
Wedding Fair with exhibitors showcasing the latest in bridal and
menswear fashion, while jewelers, decorators, flower arrangers,
photographers and makeup artists covered all the bases for an aspirant
young crowd dreaming of the perfect wedding.
“I want to have the
best wedding,” said 22-year-old student Sophea Srey, who is single and
attended the fair with three of her friends, photographing each other on
smartphones as they posed in a mock-wedding booth.
“Everything
is beautiful here but I think everything is also very expensive and my
family does not have much money, but maybe my husband will be rich,” she
added, standing among bubble machines and models parading in fairytale
gowns and spar-kling jewels.our exquisitely Embroidery lace dress weaves a rich tapestry of textures for a couture worthy finish.
Though
traditional Khmer weddings are more of a kitsch affair—with
multicolored dresses and suits adorned with sequins—the fair at Sofitel
showed how Cambodia’s youth are becoming more susceptible to Western
influences and the glitzy allure of a globalized popular culture and all
its accoutrements.
For Cambodia’s young entrepreneurs, it is an exciting time as the wedding market grows and opportunities multiply.
“I
started my business seven years ago and it is more competitive now as
there are many wedding planners because people can see that a lot of
money is being spent on weddings,” said 27-year-old Bun Sokha, who owns
Sokha Salon and Wedding Embellishment, a wedding planning service that
tailors every detail of a couple’s big event.
“When people have
money, they want something unique, something extravagant, something that
sets them apart from their peers, so we cater to their desire to be
individual whether it’s dress design, flower arrangements or food and
beverage choices.”
Ms. Sokha said that Cambodian weddings are
definitely changing and adapting to the influence of television and
social media. She also said that Western-educated people are returning
to Cambodia with different perspectives than their parents as to what a
wedding should look like.
“Before, Khmers celebrated for three
to five days and brides changed dress 10 to 15 times, but now it is more
like one-and-a-half days. Young people don’t want it so complicated,
they want to spend more time with friends and family.”
Jean-Benoit
Lasselin, owner of men’s designer fashion label Colorblind, said that
traditional Cambodian weddings still prevail, but younger generations
and more affluent classes want to put their stamp on one of the most
important celebrations in Khmer culture.
“The traditional is
blending and mixing as the young wish to release the heavy burden of its
customs. However, because Phnom Penh is not yet a shopping city,Buy
high quality china wholesale designer beaded designer beaded evening gowns.
fashion is having to prove that it is worth the money,” he said,
add-ing that his unique designs aim to reflect the city’s hybrid,
vibrant culture.
As two middle-aged women sat somewhat
bemused-looking beside mannequins wearing white wedding dresses, young
Cambodians eagerly wandered around the displays of white-tower wedding
cakes, dipped marshmallows in a chocolate fondue fountain and stared at
video screens showing distinctly Westernized wedding scenes.
“When
things change and there are new trends, people must quickly accept,
otherwise they will say you are strange,” said Ms. Sokha, the wedding
planner.
Read the full story at www.dressestmall.com/index.php/noble-beaded-a-line-straps-long-prom-evening-dress-446.html.
沒有留言:
發佈留言