Christian Siriano Unveils Spring 2027 Bridal Collection in New York
Christian Siriano’s spring 2027 bridal offering leaned into corsetry, volume and shimmer, with 13 wedding dresses and prices ranging from $3,200 to $19,000.

Christian Siriano’s spring 2027 bridal collection felt like his red-carpet instinct getting a wedding-day edit: the same appetite for drama, but sharpened into silhouettes that read bridal rather than merely formal. Presented in New York during Bridal Fashion Week, the lookbook counted 13 wedding dresses, and the collection sat comfortably inside a season crowded with 2027 bridal debuts.
What makes Siriano distinctive here is the way he moves between sculptural and sensual without losing his footing. A French Lace Halter Top with Cascading Tulle Skirt at $6,200 pushes romance through movement, while a Silk Faille Off the Shoulder Draped Bodice Gown at $9,800 leans into clean, architectural restraint. At the top end, the Beaded Crystal and Pearl Gown with Open Back, priced at $19,000, gives the collection its most overt ceremonial glamour, the kind of finish that turns a aisle walk into a full entrance.
Siriano has long understood that a bridal wardrobe is no longer one dress for one moment. His own bridal site makes that clear, ranging from high-commitment ceremony pieces to more playful afterparty options. The BRIDAL 2026 section includes a Bubble Hem Mini Dress at $3,200, a Ribbon Halter Mini Dress at $4,600, a Pearl Collar Column Gown at $4,800 and a Strapless Drop-Waist Corset Ball Gown at $8,900. That spread tells the story of a designer building for the modern bride’s entire weekend, not just the altar.

The strongest takeaway for the 2027 market is Siriano’s return to structure as seduction. Corsetry and drop waists are doing the work of shaping the body, while volume appears less as excess than as posture. The strapless drop-waist corset ball gown, in particular, feels like the kind of piece other bridal labels will be watching closely, because it bridges classic ceremony polish and the theatrical proportions that have defined Siriano’s eveningwear for years. The bubble-hem mini and ribbon halter mini point in a different direction, toward reception dressing with a little more wit and a little less solemnity.
That versatility is part of Siriano’s commercial strength. WWD noted last year that he had become creative director of Macy’s private label I.N.C., a reminder that his reach extends well beyond the runway and into the business of dressing a wide range of women. In bridal, that ambition pays off when fantasy comes with options. Siriano is not just designing a dress for the aisle; he is designing the wardrobe around the moment, and that is where the collection feels most modern.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

