

For decades, the bridal party has been treated like a required supporting cast. You get engaged, you open a group chat, and suddenly six to twelve women are coordinating dresses, bachelorette weekends, and opinions about napkin colors. It is sweet in theory and occasionally stressful in practice.
Fashion influencer Brigette Pheloung, the creator behind Acquired Style, looked at that tradition and politely opted out.
Ahead of her upcoming wedding to longtime partner Mitch McHale, the content creator shared on TikTok that she will not be having bridesmaids at all. Not fewer bridesmaids. Not uneven numbers. None. Meanwhile, her fiancé still plans to spend the morning with his groomsmen.
The internet reacted exactly how the internet does when a wedding norm is challenged. Curiosity first, mild panic second. But the more she explained, the more her decision felt less shocking and more strangely logical.
Because what she is really questioning is not bridesmaids. It is the idea that weddings have to follow a template.
“I am not having bridesmaids, but my fiancé is having groomsmen. Let’s talk about it,” she shared in her video.
The first concern viewers had was logistics. Would there be an awkward lineup imbalance at the altar? She addressed it immediately.
“It’s going to work fine, because no one is standing up there with us. No groomsmen, no bridesmaids, none of that.”
In other words, there will be no symmetrical rows of friends framing the ceremony. The focus will simply be the couple.
Even her potential maid of honor is still undecided, despite being her identical twin sister Danielle. The absence is intentional rather than accidental.
“So it’s not like Mitch will be having eight guys up there and I’ll be having one or zero,” she explained.
Instead, the day will unfold more organically. Mitch will still get ready with his friends, while Brigette plans a quieter morning.
“There’s too many of them for me to choose,” she admitted, explaining she has over twenty close friends she could theoretically include.
Rather than ranking relationships, she is avoiding the ranking altogether.
The most honest part of her explanation was not logistical. It was social.
Bridal parties have become emotionally complicated. Choosing bridesmaids is rarely just about closeness. It becomes a negotiation of history, college friendships, cousins, childhood best friends, and the one person who would definitely notice if she was left out.
Pheloung essentially refused to assign a hierarchy to her friendships. Instead, she plans to get ready with only a small circle, possibly her sister and her mother, and then invite friends afterward for photos and content.
The reaction online revealed something interesting. Many viewers were not offended. They were relieved.
She acknowledged that people worry about hurting feelings but added, “That’s 100% valid. At the end of the day, you need to do what’s best for you, so that’s what you should do.”
Her decision highlights a shift happening quietly across Gen Z weddings. Couples are prioritizing emotional ease over visual symmetry. The bridal party used to be proof of popularity. Now it can feel like a pressure-filled performance.
Her choice fits into a larger cultural shift. Weddings are moving away from production and toward experience.
Pheloung and McHale have been together nearly eight years, meeting when she was a college junior and he was a sophomore. When he proposed in New York City, she said she did not suspect anything.
“Everything seemed so normal,” she recalled, calling it the most typical Saturday.
Even though she sensed something in the car ride, she described the moment as overwhelming. “The second you see the love of your life get down on one knee and asks you to marry you is the craziest, most incredible feeling ever.”
Ironically, she loved a traditional surprise proposal but is choosing a nontraditional wedding structure. That combination perfectly captures modern couples. They are not rejecting romance. They are rejecting unnecessary logistics.
The bridal party once served a practical purpose. Historically, bridesmaids helped dress the bride and protect her from bad luck. Today they coordinate travel spreadsheets and group payments. Removing the bridal party removes a large portion of wedding stress.
What remains is the actual reason for the event.
Pheloung’s wedding will still have friends, photos, and celebration. It will simply lack the visual choreography we have come to expect. No matching robes. No lineup negotiations. No silent anxiety about who stands closest to the bride.
Her explanation was refreshingly simple. Weddings can be “as traditional or as nontraditional as you would like, and it’s your day, and that’s literally all that matters.”
The most modern wedding trend is not a color palette or a dress silhouette. It is permission. Permission to edit traditions that do not fit your life.
Sometimes the boldest planning decision is removing something entirely.
For more real wedding conversations, evolving traditions, and ideas that actually make planning easier, explore more stories with Wedded Wonderland. For structured planning and early alignment, Wedded Concierge begins with a dedicated strategy session prior to any recommendations.

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