40+ “Something Blue” Ideas for the Bride-to-Be
From sparkling jewelry to heirlooms-to-be.

Reported by Vogue.
The bride-to-be rulebook is boring, but the "something blue" tradition? That's actually worth keeping. Sure, it's Victorian superstition dressed up in poetry—the color was meant to ward off bad luck and symbolized fidelity, purity, and love. (Queen Victoria gets credit for the white dress, but before her, brides wore blue.) But here's what makes it work today: it doesn't have to be obvious. A whisper of cobalt hidden in your getting-ready routine. A cerulean heel no one sees but you. A midnight-blue satin clutch that carries you from ceremony to after-party. The tradition evolves when you stop thinking of it as a box to check and start treating it as permission to layer in something that actually excites you.
Where to Hide the Blue
The easiest move is jewelry. Earrings, bracelets, a delicate necklace—these pieces work double duty as heirlooms your daughter might actually want to wear someday. (The ring's already spoken for.) If you're building a full bridal look around the color, consider satin heels from Manolo Blahnik, Prada, or Dior—luxury shoes that justify the splurge and disappear under your gown if you want them to. For the bride who prefers subtlety, a hair accessory does the heavy lifting: a resin pin, a satin headband, or an oversized cornflower brooch that clips into your updo works in seconds.
Then there's the stuff that actually matters on the morning-of: a luxe hair brush, a roomy vanity case, satin undergarments, a robe with blue piping. These aren't Instagram moments; they're the details that make getting ready feel intentional rather than frantic. A petite bridal bag from Bottega Veneta, Erdem, or Staud carries your necessities from event to event. And the after-party dress—a flirty mini in baby blue or a slip that actually lets you move—is where you can finally breathe.
The keepsakes matter too. A ring box lined in faux suede, a marbled notebook for your vows, hand-painted dinner plates—these become the artifacts you pull out in ten years and remember exactly how you felt. And yes, the groom gets his moment: embroidered socks, a pocket square, maybe a silver lighter case with lapis lazuli. Because good luck should go both ways.
The point isn't to hunt for something blue—it's to choose something blue that actually makes you feel like yourself on your wedding day.
Read the original at Vogue.

