Sunday, September 1, 2013

Prom Dresses: Elegant or Suggestive?

Last year, in the midst of prom season, I was on a search for FOUR formal gowns for myself. I was a judge for the Miss North Carolina pageant, the preliminary for Miss America. Let me just say, “Moms, I feel your pain.” It took much longer than I had anticipated, but I found four gowns that met my own modest expectations, without adding a shrug to any a frock. It can be done, with patience and a little stubbornness.
But in our quest for modest prom dresses, we needn’t think we all look the same. In modesty, every variance counts. The juggling act lies in the wearer’s desire to express her individuality—through style, color and accessories—while maintaining modesty in her dress and actions.
I know this can be a frustrating balance for parents and their daughters, especially when it’s usually difficult to find said dresses
.
Although I don’t have a daughter, (I have two boys) my experience from last spring proved to me that most off-the-rack dresses exhibit some form of immodesty. They have beautiful straps and a top that covers the cleavage, but wield a high cut slit or a mini-skirt bottom. Or, the dress has a beautiful full skirt, but is strapless…etc.
No one ever said the narrow road was an easy road, but hopefully, with some clear dialog and standards, your daughter can be fashionable while maintaining her integrity.
Step one: The first place to start the search for the perfect gown isn’t in the store. It’s in a conversation with your daughter. Talk about dress styles—long, short, colorful, flashy, etc. Then discuss the difference between dresses that seem to exude elegance and ones that shout suggestive.
Two: Remind her that we live in an age where everything we do and wear is posted on social media sites. Her date and his parents should also be thoughtfully taken into consideration.
Finally, decide on some clear standards. These are mine:
  • Absolutely no showing of cleavage, even when bending forward
  • No low-cut backs, midriffs, or skin-showing cutouts
  • Hemlines or slits must come to no more than 3” above the knee,
  • Nothing strapless
As difficult as it seemd to find the right dresses to honor my “non-negotiables,” it helped to look in the right places. , a brick and mortar store in Fort Mill, SC (and one of many online resources) is one retailer who specializes in modest formalwear.
Many schools, including Alabama’s  have led the charge against the runway of the risqué. Among other requirements, they forbid midriffs as well as slits or skirts that rise more than three inches above the knee.
True vintage dresses or vintage inspired ones almost always hold to these standards. ’50s glamour holds great allure for students like high school junior , who praises the modest elegance of icons like Grace Kelly and Audrey Hepburn:  “Grace and Audrey always left something to the imagination,” Beebe writes at postbulletin.com.
“I believe it is that sense of modesty that my generation is often missing…”  Beebe goes on to blame the absence of modesty and an unquenchable thirst for attention as the driving forces behind scandalous prom dresses.
As far as high-fashion goes, the revealing dresses we often find on the rack are actually out-dated. What’s hot on the runway in Italy is a more elegant, almost demure look. The focus is on the face, not the body.