Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s Timeless Wedding Dress
Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s wedding dress not only launched the career of designer Narciso Rodriguez, but also inspired over three decades of brides hoping to emulate her cool, minimalist style. Bessette-Kennedy and John F. Kennedy Jr.’s September 21, 1996, nuptials on Cumberland Island, Georgia were shrouded in secrecy, but part of the reason we ever got to see any images from the 40-guest wedding was thanks to the bride’s desire to show off her look. When selecting one picture from the weekend to share with the press, their photographer Dennis Reggie told Vanity Fair that Bessette-Kennedy requested simply: “Show the dress. My dear friend designed the dress.”
That friend was designer Narciso Rodriguez, who was not only Bessette-Kennedy’s colleague at Calvin Klein but had also lived in the same apartment building with her. In a recent interview with Vogue, Rodriguez shared: “Her apartment became her shoe closet, and she lived out of my apartment. Those were really great memorable years.” It was only natural that she would turn to Rodriguez when looking to create her wedding gown for her nuptials to JFK Jr.
“I had given her a couple of ideas; she thought one was too architectural, she pulled the neckline down and a dress was born,” Rodriguez told Vogue. “For me, it was the love of my life marrying the love of her life, and so it was a very heartfelt, emotional time. I remember going to Odeon and having cosmos with her at the bar and her telling me that John had proposed and would I make her dress? It was such an exciting moment in all of our lives.”
Carolyn Bassette-Kennedy’s wedding dress oscillated easily through a sense of simplicity and expert tailoring, sensibilities that made her a fashion icon. The white slip dress was crafted from slinky yet substantial silk, which clung perfectly to the bride’s silhouette and felt even more effortless with its bias cut. A draped cowl neckline added the necessary movement and slightly sexy touch. While photos are limited from this secret, shrouded wedding—guests literally had to present special stones to get access to the island—the few pictures of the dress seem to indicate that there also was a soft draping and exposed skin at the back of the garment. The slip was fitted at her hips and seat, and puddled lightly to the floor. For accessories, Bassette-Kennedy wore long and sheer gloves, a silk tulle veil, and crystal-beaded satin Manolo Blahnik sandals. As a “something old,” the bride wore her hair in a bun clipped with a pin that was owned by her late mother-in-law, Jackie Kennedy Onassis. A clean, green and white bouquet of lily of the valley finished her look.
What might seem like a very classic style now was quite avant-garde for a bride at the time. The ‘80s saw the lasting influence of Princess Diana’s dramatic wedding gown, which carried into the early ‘90s. Most wedding dresses of the era were embellished, voluminous, and teaming with tulle. Vera Wang was beginning to break the mold, bringing cleaner lines and silhouettes to her collections that she released at the start of the decade. The new American royalty went in a different direction. Bessette-Kennedy’s sensual, drapey dress pushed the boundaries even further—and officially set the tone for the “cool girl” bride of the era and beyond.
“Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s dress undoubtedly changed the course of bridal: how unexpected it felt in that moment, and how it ultimately became a modern classic,” bridal designer Danielle Frankel tells Vogue. “There’s something to be said for a bit of shock; it recalibrates things. It makes sense that her spirit still resonates today.”

