logo
I'm a savvy bride and transformed £25 charity shop find into my dream wedding dress, it saved me £775

I'm a savvy bride and transformed £25 charity shop find into my dream wedding dress, it saved me £775

The Sun22-07-2025
FINDING some decent bargains in your local charity shop is about luck as much as it is about having a good eye.
But one savvy bride has shown how she hit the jackpot when she stumbled across a classic vintage gown - and turned it into her dream wedding dress.
4
Hannah Penberthy, 23, regularly snaps up incredible bargains from charity shops and thrift stores.
Once she brings them home, she often turns them into upcycle projects and makes some alterations to make them good as new.
But this time, when creative Hannah spotted a traditional, vintage wedding dress for just £25, she knew it was going to be more than just a project.
The moment she saw the gown, she knew it was coming home with her and saw the potential it had to become something chic and preppy.
After making some adjustments, the end result was so incredible that Hannah now plans to wear it at her own wedding reception - saving her a massive £775 on a new dress.
Speaking to endource.com, Hannah said her plan quickly came together after she brought the dress home.
The bodice had the most beautiful detailing... I plan to wear it as my 'goodbye' dress while I leave my wedding reception venue in a vintage car
Hannah Penberthy
She said: "I found this traditional wedding dress at a charity store, and what drew me to it was its vintage style.
"The bodice had the most beautiful detailing, and, having recently gotten engaged, I plan to wear it as my 'goodbye' dress while I leave my wedding reception venue in a vintage car.
'My idea was to cut off the sleeves and half of the skirt to turn it into a shorter cocktail dress, with puffy sleeves.
"After creating a bubble skirt, I used the excess fabric from the skirt to sew together the sleeves and attach them to the shoulder part of the bodice.
"I cut out the excess mesh and changed the neckline into more of a sweetheart neckline. This consisted of cutting and sewing a hem.
"I tried to keep the identity of this dress and conserve its natural beauty, while updating it to be more my style.'
The creative bride-to-be revealed that she saved an incredible £775 in the process of upcycling the dress.
Hannah added: 'I had been looking at dresses similar to the one I made, and most were priced between £400 and £800, to buy brand new.
"By creating my own dress, I saved a substantial amount, spending only around £25 at a charity shop for the original piece.'
And she said that this huge saving, mixed with being able to show off her creativity, is what inspired her to repurpose the dress.
Hannah said: 'I decided to repurpose this dress for many reasons: to save money, to be eco-conscious, and to explore my creative side.
"Shopping from a charity shop saves money and lends itself to finding such unique pieces.
"But it also is a way of supporting more sustainable fashion practices and reducing textile waste.
"Thrift flipping gives new life to clothing that might otherwise end up in a landfill, and it promotes a more thoughtful, community-oriented approach to style.
TOP ADVICE
HANNAH has shared her top piece of advice for anyone planning to repurpose their wedding dress - or other clothes in general!
She said: "My biggest piece of advice is: just go for it!
"We often spend too much time overthinking, but taking that first step is the hardest part — and it's so worth it.
"Sewing might seem intimidating at first, but it's incredibly rewarding and more approachable than it seems.
"Once you get the hang of it, it opens up a world of creative possibilities.
"Repurposing a dress, especially for something as meaningful as your wedding, adds so much personal value.
"There's something really special about wearing something you poured your heart into, knowing it's one-of-a-kind and full of love.
"And who knows, maybe one day you'll pass it down and make it part of someone else's story too.'
"I also love that it allows me to be creative and work on my sewing skills. I can create anything I can imagine. How freeing is that?!'
This project only fuelled Hannah's passion to take on upcycling projects more regularly, which she has loved doing over the past year.
She said: 'Over the past year, I've gotten into the habit of regularly buying and flipping second-hand clothing.
"It's become a true passion of mine.
"I love fashion, working with my hands, and bringing creative ideas to life.
"There's something incredibly rewarding about the entire process, especially when I wear a piece out and someone asks, 'Where did you get that?' and I get to say, 'I actually made it!'
"I definitely plan to keep doing this and would love to one day turn it into something more than just a hobby.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First edition of The Hobbit sells for €49,000
First edition of The Hobbit sells for €49,000

BreakingNews.ie

time27 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

First edition of The Hobbit sells for €49,000

A 'rare' first edition of JRR Tolkien book The Hobbit discovered during a house clearance in Bristol has sold at auction for £43,000 (€49,000). It is one of only 1,500 copies printed in September 1937, according to auction house Auctioneum, and was sold to a UK-based private collector at an auction held in Bath. Advertisement Caitlin Riley, book specialist at Auctioneum, said: 'It's the quintessential auction story. Everyone dreams of finding a rare item hidden in plain sight, and here we are. 'House clearances can be tricky, stressful and troublesome – if ever there is a good advert for our service, it's this! This could have so easily been sent to landfill or disposed of by someone who didn't realise it was there. It really is a lucky survivor! Caitlin Riley with The Hobbit book (Auctioneum Ltd/PA) 'The result just goes to show the pure love for Tolkien's work. Written nearly 90 years ago, it's amazing how relevant and popular it still is. 'People still want the escape; they want to delve into a fantastical world and discover new characters. Some people are clearly willing to pay large sums for the privilege. Advertisement 'Much like the tale within the covers – selling this has been a real adventure. 'We've had hundreds of inquiries from all around the world and whilst we were expecting a certain amount of interest, we weren't quite expecting this much! It's a wonderful result, for a very special book.' Including buyer's premium, which is an additional charge that the winning bidder must pay on top of the hammer price, the book totalled £52,000 (€59,000). The book sold for £43,000 (Auctioneum Ltd/PA) It was discovered in the family library of Hubert Priestley, a famous botanist in the 1930s and brother to Antarctic explorer and geologist Sir Raymond Edward Priestley. Advertisement The auction house said Priestley and Tolkien both shared mutual correspondence with author CS Lewis, as well as strong connections to the University of Oxford, meaning it is likely both men knew each other. Ms Riley said: 'To think that just a few weeks ago this book was sat undiscovered on a bookshelf in a Bristol house, and has gone on to make headlines around the world, is quite incredible. 'It's the connection to Tolkien and the important provenance that makes this book so special. It's not just any first edition; it belonged to someone who very likely called Tolkien an acquaintance.' The Hobbit, a children's fantasy novel published in 1937, follows hobbit Bilbo Baggins as he is joined by wizard Gandalf and the 13 dwarves of Thorin's Company in a bid to win their treasure from dragon Smaug. Advertisement Peter Jackson directed the film trilogy, which starred Martin Freeman as titular hobbit Bilbo.

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

time27 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.

Swimsuit-clad Vogue Williams looks more loved-up than ever with husband Spencer Matthews as she marks his birthday with a series of sweet snaps
Swimsuit-clad Vogue Williams looks more loved-up than ever with husband Spencer Matthews as she marks his birthday with a series of sweet snaps

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Swimsuit-clad Vogue Williams looks more loved-up than ever with husband Spencer Matthews as she marks his birthday with a series of sweet snaps

Vogue Williams looked more loved-up than ever with husband Spencer Matthews as she shared a series of sweet snaps to mark his 37th birthday. The Irish presenter, 39, who tied the knot with the former Made In Chelsea star in 2018, marked the occasion on Instagram on Wednesday. In one photo, she stunned in a black swimsuit and Pucci-inspired sarong, posing beside Spencer in an open black shirt and colourful swim shorts. Another snap showed the couple gazing lovingly into each other's eyes on the beach, followed by a playful selfie at a second seaside spot. She also included a sweet throwback of them sharing a kiss at a wedding earlier this year, and a shot of Spencer grinning next to a giant birthday cake on a yacht. Alongside the post, Vogue wrote: 'Happiest of birthdays to my kind, gorgeous and funny @spencermatthews we all love you.' The Irish star shares her children, Theodore, six, Gigi, four, and Otto, three with Spencer. It comes after Vogue revealed in May that she often feels 'mum guilt' when she is away from her children working. Speaking on The Life of Bryony podcast, she said that like many mums, she has put pressure on herself to 'do and be everything'. 'I suffer from mum guilt all the time', Vogue admitted. 'I feel guilty when I am working, and I feel guilty when I am with my kids. I worry when I spend more time with one of them and not the others. 'I spend a lot of time with Theodore and Gigi because I take them places – so I have to create time to spend with Otto on his own. 'I think as women we put so much pressure on ourselves to be able to do and be everything. Going out there and working should be great for your children to see. 'Whether you're a working mum or staying at home, I think you're always going to feel some level of guilt. When realistically, you can't do it all.' Speculating about why Vogue was putting so much pressure on herself as a parent, host Bryony Gordon, 45, admitted that her attitude may reflect the beliefs of a generation. She said: 'Women of our generation were brought up with that notion – that you can have it all. 'Even the question itself – you see these high-profile women always get asked that question. No one is asking that question of men. 'I don't want to have it all – I don't need to be everything to everyone.' 'Everyone just has to accept that sometimes, laundry is a nightmare, and we might forget to reply to an email or several.' Vogue jokingly responded: 'I have 364 unread WhatsApps – It's terrible!' Both Vogue and Spencer are known for their dedication to health and fitness, especially Spencer, who turned his life around after struggling with alcohol abuse during his time on Made in Chelsea. The star also battled an addiction to steroids, the use resulted in his removal from ITV show I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! in 2015. Spencer is now the founder and Chief Business Officer of CleanCo Non-alcoholic Spirits, which he founded soon after eldest son Theo's birth. His eldest brother is married to Pippa Middleton, and his parents are the Laird and Lady of Glen Affric, a 10,000-acre estate in the Highlands of Scotland. Appearing on an installment of the Mail's 'The Life of Bryony' podcast, Vogue recently admitted she 'thought her life was over' after divorcing Westlife singer Brian McFadden. In a candid conversation with Mail columnist Bryony Gordon, 'relationship girl' Vogue reflected on her love life ahead of turning forty. She remembered feeling as though she had 'ruined her life' in 2017 after her divorce aged 31 from Westlife singer Brian McFadden. 'I am excited at turning forty', Vogue told the podcast. 'When you are 19 or 20, you think that 40-year-olds are really old and battered. Then you actually get there and you think, this is a really nice moment. 'In your thirties, you are still trying to figure stuff out. I remember being divorced at 31 and thinking, I've ruined my life. I am never going to have kids, I am never going to do what I always wanted to do.

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