Bettina Anderson chooses Safiyaa for a quiet-luxury bridal look
Bettina Anderson wore two custom Safiyaa looks, including a 75-hour grid-embroidered dress, and turned her wedding wardrobe into a clean, quiet-luxury flex.

Bettina Anderson chose Safiyaa for both of her wedding looks, and the decision landed like a clean, pointed message: bridal can be sharp, restrained, and still feel expensive. She worked closely with Daniela Karnuts on two custom pieces, including a grid-inspired design that took 75 hours for Safiyaa’s artisans to complete.
That is exactly where Safiyaa sits in the market. Karnuts founded the London house in 2011 around a bespoke idea of modern elegance, and the brand’s made-to-order program is built on sculpted tailoring, custom color, length, and fit. Anderson’s choice put that formula on display in a setting that only amplified the polish, a private Memorial Day weekend celebration in the Bahamas, with earlier legal marriage paperwork filed in Florida on May 21, 2026.

The first look leaned into the label’s strongest instinct, precise lines over bridal excess. The second changed the register without losing the discipline: Anderson switched into a two-piece ivory double silk organza ensemble for the reception and after-party. Another account described the after-party set as carrying crystal, metallic, and silk-cord embroidery that took 150 hours, which only sharpened the point that this was couture-level construction, not a one-off dress pulled for a headline.
The family list around the celebration kept the wedding squarely in the public eye, with Ivanka Trump, Tiffany Trump, Lara Trump, and Eric Trump among the attendees. That visibility matters because Anderson’s style has already been reading as neutral, sculpted, and refined, the kind of wardrobe language that makes a minimalist bridal label look less niche and more inevitable. Safiyaa gets authority from brides like this because it offers something the market is clearly hungry for: high-polish wedding dressing without the fluff, the froth, or the usual bridal clichés.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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