logo
Woman is mercilessly mocked online for wearing 'tacky' Juicy Couture sweats as her wedding outfit

Woman is mercilessly mocked online for wearing 'tacky' Juicy Couture sweats as her wedding outfit

Daily Mail​12-05-2025
A bride who chose to ditch a traditional wedding dress for her big day has revealed her reasons for getting married in a Juicy Couture tracksuit.
Ianthe Rose got wed in London to the love of her life and she shared her unconventional ensemble on TikTok.
Rose said she opted for the choice 'to be comfy' and after the ceremony the newlyweds had a meal of 'chips and champagne'.
Casual ceremony: Ianthe Rose ditched a traditional wedding dress on her big day and decided to get married in a Juicy Couture tracksuit
Meanwhile, her husband also went for a laid-back ensemble in cream chinos and a gray T-shirt.
Rose captioned the post: 'This is your sign to get married in a Juicy tracksuit. When I tell you I've never been more comfy.'
The loved-up couple posed on the steps outside the town hall for their wedding snaps in their unconventional outfits.
Rose wrote on TikTok: 'We needed to get married at a registry because we don't want a formal wedding and are not having a registrar, and we're not religious so not getting married at a church. We want it to be chilled.'
Many used the comments to leave their own thoughts on the tradition-breaking outfits, with some questioning the choice.
One person wrote: 'Girl, stand up, you're way too old for being like this.'
Another added: 'Oh come oooon, they didn't really get married. All we see here is them walking and some random guy throwing some petals.'
However the majority of comments called the outfit choice 'iconic' and that she looked 'chic'.
Their way: The loved-up couple posed on the steps of the town hall for their wedding snaps
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Amaarae: Black Star review – ​glamour, glitz and lust from a pop star who should be a supernova
Amaarae: Black Star review – ​glamour, glitz and lust from a pop star who should be a supernova

The Guardian

time22 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Amaarae: Black Star review – ​glamour, glitz and lust from a pop star who should be a supernova

Fountain Baby, the second album by Amaarae, was a revelation – a sensual, funny, frank and musically dense record released in 2023 that established the 31-year-old Ghanaian American pop musician as a cultural force to match contemporaries such as Rosalía and Charli xcx. Although the songs are hedonistic – largely oscillating between wry flexes of wealth and lyrics about trifling with, and being trifled by, women in her orbit – she is also a realist: actions have consequences in Amaarae's world, such as on Reckless & Sweet, as she wonders whether her lovers desire her or merely her money. Despite the ingenuity and complexity of her music, Amaarae has struggled to break into the mainstream, in the UK at least. A recent Glastonbury set felt sparsely attended and, aside from 2020's Sad Girlz Luv Money, one of the most enduring viral hits to emerge from TikTok into the real world, few of her singles have had crossover moments. Hopefully that will change with Black Star, her sleek and hugely enjoyable third album. It requires a slight resetting of expectations. After the plainly radical Fountain Baby, perhaps Amaarae would become downright experimental, but Black Star makes it clear that she just wants to have fun. This is her take on a club record, weaving elements of house, trance and EDM into Afrobeats rhythms and spiky rap cadences. It's more straightforward than its predecessor, but that doesn't diminish its pleasure, derived in large part from Amaarae's relentless pursuit of just that: these songs exalt drinking, drug‑taking, rowdy sex and fine dressing in such a clarified, unapologetic way that they would elicit blushes even from the Weeknd, pop's reigning king of smut. You can imagine Amaarae's bass-heavy but elegant music soundtracking a dark, exclusive superclub, a fitting mode for a musician who prioritises opulence and indulgence in her music. Starkilla, a collaboration with the London rapper Bree Runway, is a villainous-sounding house track the hook of which is simply 'ketamine, coke and molly' over and over again; the slick crush-object song B2B combines pulsating electro with the euphoric chug of South African amapiano. There is a remarkable amount of other dance styles explored here: high-speed dembow and baile funk animate Girlie-Pop!; there are elements of Detroit techno and gqom, another South African style, on SMO; and the opener, Stuck Up, features raucous club rap. Even if it's a more traditional record overall, her globalist attitude makes for sparky, cosmopolitan music. The focus of Amaarae's lyrics hasn't changed significantly, although Black Star is a softer and more lovestruck album than its predecessor. On Kiss Me Thru the Phone Pt 2, a PinkPantheress-featuring sequel to the Soulja Boy original, Amaarae and PinkPantheress sing sweetly about 'yearning for you to the bone', their twinned helium voices sounding surprisingly great together. Fineshyt, the best song here, is a gentle trance track that captures the innate sense of melancholy in the much-maligned genre, Amaarae singing about wanting to try a real relationship with her object of affection. These songs provide a welcome counterpoint to the abrasive posturing of earlier ones, which have Amaarae and guests – including Naomi Campbell – mugging and boasting to admittedly great effect. Campbell's appearance is eyebrow-raising: 'They call me a bitch, a villain, controversial diva – no, I am the black star,' she intones, which will probably inflame the many people still up in arms over Campbell's misdeeds, ranging from assault convictions to the alleged mismanagement of a charity (which she denies). But it's fitting for an album that is deliriously in love with wealth, celebrity and all the power it affords. There is a difference between Amaarae and all the other stars fixated on such topics: for her, glamour is a side quest and love is the motive. Shopping at Saks and being passed another blunt might be nice, Amaarae seems to say, but the real high comes from finding someone to share it with. Wild Pink and Fenne Lily: Disintegrate – Edit Wild Pink's John Ross is one of the best lyricists in indie music. The deluxe reissue of his fantastic Dulling the Horns promises plenty of great reinterpretations of his bizarro images, including this soft take on Disintegrate by the English folk singer Fenne Lily.

TOM UTLEY: As a lapsed Catholic, I'm in no position to lecture anyone about religion. But Kemi's reasons for rejecting God strike me as frankly preposterous
TOM UTLEY: As a lapsed Catholic, I'm in no position to lecture anyone about religion. But Kemi's reasons for rejecting God strike me as frankly preposterous

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

TOM UTLEY: As a lapsed Catholic, I'm in no position to lecture anyone about religion. But Kemi's reasons for rejecting God strike me as frankly preposterous

A few years ago I received a borderline-blasphemous birthday card, which I have to admit made me chuckle. It showed a sweet little birthday girl of about five, dressed in pink, kneeling in prayer by her bed, with a thought bubble emerging from her head reading: 'So where's my f****** pony?' I thought of that card this week when I heard Kemi Badenoch 's explanation of why she had 'rejected God'.

Jodie Kidd makes rare public appearance with her lookalike son Indio, 13, as they attend the Space NK London launch party
Jodie Kidd makes rare public appearance with her lookalike son Indio, 13, as they attend the Space NK London launch party

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jodie Kidd makes rare public appearance with her lookalike son Indio, 13, as they attend the Space NK London launch party

Jodie Kidd made a rare public appearance with her son Indio while attending the opening of Space NK's new Oxford Street store in London on Thursday. The English fashion model, 46, was joined by her 13-year-old son, whom she shares with her ex-partner, former Argentinian polo player Andrea Vianini, at the event, held at the site previously occupied by Topshop. The proud mum put one arm around her son as the pair posed for the cameras ahead of the star-studded launch party. For the outing, Jodie looked effortlessly chic in a structured aqua blue blazer adorned with gold buttons. She teamed the stylish blazer with a classic black top and light blue slim-fit denim jeans. To complete her look, the beauty sported a pair of purple loafers with tassel detailing and toted her essentials in a mini black backpack. The 46-year-old English fashion model looked effortlessly chic in a structured aqua blue blazer adorned with gold buttons at the event, held at the former Topshop location Meanwhile, her son Indio sported a black hoody with skull and butterfly graphic prints and faded blue denim jeans. He completed his look with a pair of white Nike trainers as he beamed alongside his mum. Beauty retailer Space NK opened its huge new West End flagship store on Oxford Street on Thursday, in the space once occupied by Philip Green's store. The 4,600 sq ft superstore at 214 Oxford Circus is the company's biggest outlet yet. The store, set on one floor, will feature Space NK's new 'beauty experience concept' and stock its entire range of luxury beauty and skincare brands. Space NK previously promised the London flagship would allow customers 'to explore the very best that beauty has to offer.' Chief Executive Andy Lightfoot told Cosmetics Business earlier this year: 'With our active customer base now reaching two million and our growth continually outperforming the market at over 30%, 'We saw that now was the time to answer our customers' demand for a true flagship in the West End. 'Oxford Street is one of the preeminent shopping destinations in the world, and 214 Oxford Circus in particular is an iconic store. An iconic location for our new central London flagship store. He added: 'The mission with our flagship to push boundaries once again on what can be achieved with an instore shopping experience – and another page in the story of Space NK, as well celebrate 30 years a leading British beauty retailer.' Space NK was founded in 1991 by entrepreneur Nicky Kinnaird, whose initials gave the company its name, with its first store opening in Covent Garden in 1993. It is now owned by investor Manzanita Capital. In May last year, Sky News reported the chain was exploring a sale and had appointed investment bankers to manage the process, valuing it between $374 million and $500 million.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store