How Much Does a Custom Wedding Dress Cost? A Real Price Breakdown

How Much Does a Custom Wedding Dress Cost? A Real Price Breakdown

Key Takeaways

  • A custom wedding dress at Lutien Bridal starts at $1,490 — a simple silhouette in faux silk, made to your exact measurements.
  • Price is driven by three factors: construction complexity, embroidery coverage, and fabric choice.
  • Full hand embroidery to the hem starts at $3,890. Embroidery with a train: $5,000 and up.
  • Natural silk is available from $2,690 — a premium option that takes longer and costs more for a good reason.
  • We work from our own sketches and your vision. We don't copy other brands' designs.

The most common question before a bride places an order: What is this going to cost?

Here is the honest answer, with actual numbers and what they include.


Price Overview

Dress Category Starting Price
Simple silhouette, faux silk $1,490
Complex construction — corset, train, 3D elements $1,890
Hand embroidery to waist $2,290
Natural silk, simple silhouette $2,690
Hand embroidery to mid-thigh $2,690
Hand embroidery to knee $2,890
Full hand embroidery to hem $3,890
Hand embroidery + train $5,000+

These are starting prices for each tier. Unusual construction, dense embroidery, rare fabrics — all quoted individually after the design consultation.

Lutien Bridal — Custom Dress Starting Prices (USD) $0 $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 $5,000 Simple silhouette $1,490 Complex construction $1,890 Embroidery to waist $2,290 Natural silk / mid-thigh embroidery $2,690 Embroidery to knee $2,890 Full embroidery to hem $3,890 Embroidery + train $5,000+
Source: Lutien Bridal price tiers, 2026

What $1,490 Gets You

At the entry price, you get a dress made entirely to your measurements — from a pattern drafted to your specific body, not a standard size pinned and tucked to fit. The fabric is high-quality faux silk: viscose-satin blends that drape cleanly and hold structure.

This tier covers clean silhouettes. Slip dresses, simple A-lines, minimalist column gowns, unstructured ballgowns without boning. No corset construction, no built-in train, no hand embroidery.

We produce a sketch for every dress before a single stitch is sewn. You share references and describe what you're imagining. We sketch it and send it back for your approval. Nothing moves forward until that sketch is confirmed — on both sides.

Artistic setup with watercolor paints, brushes, and sketches on a round table.

Wedding dress sketch Gianna — off-shoulder ballgown with intricate lace pattern, front and back view

If your design is a clean silhouette without structural complexity, $1,490 is your starting price. The level of care that goes into it is the same as every other dress we make.


What Drives the Price Up

Three things increase the cost: construction complexity, embroidery coverage, and fabric choice.

Construction Complexity

A dress with a boned corset, a sweep or cathedral train, layered skirts with internal structure, or any 3D decorative elements starts at $1,890. These features require additional hours, materials, and fitting stages to execute correctly.

Wedding dress sketch Carina — structured corset bodice, elegant A-line skirt with flared sleeves and layered hem

The line between simple and complex is straightforward: if the dress requires internal structure to hold its shape, it's the complex tier.

Embroidery — the Main Cost Driver

Hand embroidery is the most significant cost variable in a custom wedding dress. At our atelier, all embroidery is done by hand — individual beads, crystals, threads, and lace pieces placed one at a time. Price is set by how far down the skirt the embroidery reaches.

Embroidery Coverage Starting Price
To waist (incl. sleeves, back, front; lace max 4–5 cm onto hips) $2,290
To mid-thigh $2,690
To knee $2,890
Full to hem $3,890
Full to hem + train $5,000+

Why does coverage add so much? A skirt is radial. From the waist to the hem, the circumference of the fabric expands with every tier. Full-hem embroidery requires three to four times the material and time of a waist-only application. That's what you're paying for.

Hand embroidery close-up — feather and leaf pattern with sequins and beads on sheer nude mesh

Heavily beaded pearl sleeves close-up — dense hand-set beadwork on sheer bridal fabric

Lace appliqué counts as hand work too. Individual lace motifs are cut from lace fabric and positioned across the gown by hand — this isn't machine-applied trim.

Fabric Choice

Our standard is high-quality faux silk: viscose, satin blends, and similar materials that drape well and are what most brides choose. They look beautiful and they're the right choice for most designs.

Natural silk is a different category. We work with organza, chiffon, jacquard, charmeuse, satin, and many other natural silk fabrics — a wide selection. A natural silk dress starts at $2,690 for a simple silhouette.

Ivory charmeuse natural silk swirled — the luminous drape of genuine silk for a custom wedding gown

White organza bridal fabric — sheer, structured, and luminous

Natural silk costs more and takes longer because it can't be unpicked without leaving marks. Every cut and seam must be right the first time. We build a toile — a test version in cheaper fabric — before we touch the silk, which adds both time and cost. If you want natural silk, we can absolutely do it. Just know what you're signing up for.


How Our Hand Embroidery Works

Every piece of embroidery on a Lutien Bridal dress is placed by hand. Individual beads threaded and secured one by one. Crystals set into mesh. Lace motifs cut from raw lace fabric and sewn into position across a bodice or skirt. There's no batch production, no machine assist.

Embroidery is applied after the dress is constructed — on the finished gown. This is why it can't be added or changed once production has started. Design decisions about embroidery coverage are final before the pattern is cut.

Gold and yellow hand-embroidered flowers on dark mesh with flowing grey chiffon overlay

Silver beaded leaf-pattern embroidery on sheer mesh — close-up of hand-set beadwork on bridal fabric

The coverage tiers map to real differences in finishing time. Waist-level embroidery adds 1–2 weeks. Full-hem embroidery adds 2–3 weeks. Each step in the pricing ladder represents additional weeks of skilled work, not just more materials.


3D Elements, Feathers, and Special Details

We also make dresses with three-dimensional decorative work: fabric flowers, feathers, rhinestones, structural dimensional appliqué. These fall under complex construction pricing at minimum, with additional cost based on what you want and how much of the dress it covers.

Handmade 3D lavender fabric flowers with rhinestone centers, shown for scale next to a hand

Full view of 3D fabric flower textile — handmade dimensional embellishment for a bridal gown

White French lace trim laid flat — individual lace pieces cut for precise hand-placement on a custom gown

3D elements are quoted individually. Tell us what you're imagining and we'll give you a specific number. There's no blanket surcharge — it depends on the type, density, and coverage.


What We Don't Make

We design from our own sketches, adapted to what each bride wants. Every dress starts with a design conversation: your references, your ideas, your measurements — and our sketches back to you for approval. That's the process.

What we don't do is make exact copies of other brands' designs. If you've seen a specific gown somewhere and want it reproduced stitch-for-stitch, that's not something we offer. We don't work that way.

Original mermaid-style wedding dress sketch with intricate lace detailing — Lutien Bridal design with lace fabric in the foreground

What we do accept as references: dress photos, Pinterest collections, AI-generated concepts, rough sketches, a written description. We use them to understand what you're drawn to, then we build something that's yours — not a reproduction of someone else's work.

If you want a dress that takes elements you love and interprets them as an original design, that's exactly what we do.


Custom vs. Off-the-Rack: The Honest Difference

A mid-range off-the-rack bridal gown in the US runs $990–$1,290. Custom at Lutien Bridal starts at $1,490.

That $200–$500 difference at the entry tier buys a dress made to your body from scratch, not altered toward a standard size. It also buys a design chosen for you — not pulled from a rack that five other brides in your city might already have ordered.

At the embellished tier, the comparison changes significantly. A heavily beaded off-the-rack gown at $3,000–$5,000 was almost certainly produced with machine embroidery at scale. Our dresses at that price point carry hand-placed beadwork, done by hand, after the gown is assembled, on a dress made for one specific person.

That's the difference. Not the price alone — the work behind it.


Tell Us What You're Imagining

The fastest way to get an accurate quote is to write to us. A rough description, a few reference images, or a full detailed brief — whatever you have. We'll tell you what it would cost and how long it would take.

Tell us about your dress →


Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a custom wedding dress take?

Production at Lutien Bridal takes 9–14 weeks from order confirmation, plus approximately one week for UPS delivery to the US. Simple silhouettes fall at the 9-week end. Dresses with full-bodice hand embroidery fall at 14 weeks. We recommend reaching out 10 months before your wedding date to give the timeline room to breathe.

Full production timeline guide →

Can I have embroidery at the lower price points?

The hand embroidery tiers start at $2,290 (coverage to waist). Below that, the dress can include lace trim as a design element — flat-applied border lace or bodice lace — which is different from coverage-based hand embroidery. Tell us what you're picturing and we'll tell you exactly what tier it falls into.

Do you work with AI-generated dress images?

Yes. AI-generated concepts are useful starting points for a design conversation. Bring us whatever reference you have — AI renders, photos, mood boards, sketches on paper. We use them to understand what you want, not as blueprints to reproduce exactly.

What about unusual requests — feathers, dramatic 3D work, unconventional construction?

Pearl and sequin hand embroidery extreme close-up — the precision of hand-set beadwork on bridal lace fabric

Write to us. We handle complex and unusual projects regularly — structural 3D elements, feathers, unconventional silhouettes, custom embroidery designs. Price and timeline are quoted individually based on what you need. If you're ready to pay the real cost of your dream dress, we'll make it happen.

Why don't you copy dresses from other brands?

We build original work. Every dress at our atelier starts with our own design process — your wishes, our sketches, your approval. Copying another designer's work isn't part of that process. What we can do is take the qualities you love about a dress you've seen and interpret them into something that's genuinely yours.

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