Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Bridal Shop Worker Says Groom Accidentally Buried His Late Grandma In His Bride-To-Be's Wedding Dress

Bridal Shop Worker Says Groom Accidentally Buried His Late Grandma In His Bride-To-Be's Wedding Dress
@Kasias_Bridal/TikTok

Weddings are back, fam! But also it's 2022 so expect it to be back with a vengeance... and for things to be just as weird and surreal as everything else has been this decade.

Enter Kasia, owner of Kasia's Bridal, and absolute super hero.


She shared the story of how her shop saved the day after a groom accidentally buried his dead grandma in his bride-to-be's wedding dress.

After grandma passed, she wanted to be buried in her wedding dress since her husband had been buried in his wedding tux.

A common and heartwarming decision.

Except the men were left in charge of retrieving the dress for grannies closed casket funeral and just grabbed the first bridal bag they saw in the closet.

Problem: That wasn't grandma's dress.

Other problem: Closed casket funeral. Nobody saw the dress on grandma before it went into the ground.

By the time the family was done mourning and ready to start sorting through things, grandma had been six fabulous feet under for a while.

Imagine the horror of going through the closet, realizing grandmas dress was still in there, and having it dawn on you that you must have just buried your grandma in the dress your partner was supposed to wear to walk down the aisle to you.

After the dress is purchased and altered, lots of brides give them to someone to store until the big day. In this case, the bride gave her dress to "mom."

His mom - not hers. Which means the brides dress went in the same closet grandma's dress was in. The closet that he and his clueless brother were sent into the look for a wedding dress.

Yeah ... the groom was frantic.


Not really willing to dig up a corpse, rinse the goo off the dress, and ask his bride to wear it - the groom called Kasia's shop desperate to see if she could re-order the dress.

After coming to terms with the fact that the groom was serious about what happened, she got to work.

First, she reached out to the designer - who told her they were too close to the wedding for a new dress to happen.

Oof.


The family, who was all involved and invested by now, was left with no choice. They had to tell the bride the truth.

She was about to get married and didn't have a wedding dress - but grandma was looking lovely and beautifully bustled on the other side.

She would need to figure out a new dress and had very little time to do it.

Amazingly - the bride was thrilled. Turns out she had her own secret - she was pregnant!

The original gown wouldn't have fit her correctly on the wedding day anyway.

We're not saying this was orchestrated by a very in-the-know granny spirit, but we're not NOT saying that...


Kasia's team was able to use extra fabric to create a look the bride loved and fit her well - and the couple is, so far, living happily ever after.

Not all heros wear capes, but if Kasia and her squad did they would probably be gorgeously beaded or absolute organza dreamscapes.

They totally deserve them.

More from Trending

Lilly Wachowski; Keanu Reeves
So True with Caleb Hearon/YouTube; Warner Bros.

Lilly Wachowski Shares How She Had To 'Let Go' Of 'The Matrix' After It Was Twisted By Right-Wing Theories

Matrix co-creator Lilly Wachowski has opened up about what it's been like to see her magnum opus The Matrix be co-opted by the far-right.

Anywhere you go in online spaces for the past 10-15 years, right-wing weirdos talk about being "red-pilled," a reference to the film's plot point in which lead character Neo is offered a red pill that will enlighten him to the realities of the systems ruling our lives, or a blue pill that will allow him to stay ignorant.

Keep ReadingShow less
Madonna; Donald Trump
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Madonna Rips Trump Administration's 'Absurd' Decision Not To Mark World AIDS Day For First Time Since 1988

Pop icon, singer, songwriter, record producer, and actor Madonna has a bone to pick with the administration of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump.

On Monday, the Queen of Pop noted on Instagram that December 1 was World AIDS Day, but the United States government wouldn't be acknowledging it for the first time since the World Health Organization had established the day in 1988.

Keep ReadingShow less
Franklin the Turtle illustration; Pete Hegseth
CBC Television

'Franklin The Turtle' Publisher Condemns Pete Hegseth For Turning Beloved Character Into Violent Meme

Kids Can Press, the Canadian publisher behind the beloved Franklin children's books, condemned Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in a statement after he shared an AI-generated image of Franklin the Turtle to justify his attacks on alleged drug-smuggling vessels in the Caribbean.

Hegseth's original meme, which he inexplicably captioned "for your Christmas wish list," features a doctored book cover titled Franklin Targets Narco Terrorists and shows Franklin, the protagonist of the popular Canadian children's book series authored by Paulette Bourgeois and illustrated by Brenda Clark, firing a bazooka from a helicopter at boats in the water below.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sabrina Carpenter; Donald Trump
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Sabrina Carpenter Rips White House For Using Her Song In 'Evil And Disgusting' Pro-ICE Video

Pop star Sabrina Carpenter warned the White House not to use her music for their "inhumane" agenda after the executive branch posted a video of ICE raids that used her song "Juno" without her consent.

The video released by the White House repurposed a line from Carpenter’s viral “have you ever tried this one” lyric, turning the playful phrase into a backdrop for a montage of ICE agents pursuing, detaining, and handcuffing immigrants.

Keep ReadingShow less

People Reveal The Strangely Specific Things About Someone That Give Off A Bad Vibe

I have feelings about people.

I'm not an empath.

Keep ReadingShow less