Weddings

Ivy Getty Wears John Galliano for Maison Margiela to Walk Down the Aisle at City Hall in San Francisco

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Emilie WHITE

“Here” is in the 6,000-square-foot penthouse suite at the Fairmont Hotel—a place that has been the temporary home for royalty, presidents, and countless celebrities over the years. Ivy is sitting in a director’s chair prepping for her rehearsal dinner later that evening. The bride s glam squad, made up of Bobby Eliot, Renny Vasquez, and Mo Qin, work their magic on hair, makeup, and nails respectively, the latter of which are being adorned with intricate butterflies. On her left hand is the sapphire engagement ring that Toby proposed with in Capri—it used to belong to the groom’s mother and now has Ivy’s grandmother’s diamonds around the center stone. Ivy’s rescue dog “Blue”—a Chihuahua mix she adopted from the Best Friends Animal Society in L.A.—scurries in and out of the room wearing a Christian Cohen x Max Cohen collaboration fuzzy sweater.

Talk turns back to the dress. Ivy and John Galliano met officially for the first time via Zoom during the pandemic and quickly formed a bond, despite the fact that they hadn’t spoken in real life. “We just understood each other,” Ivy says. “From growing up around his designs and knowing them so well, I felt like I already knew him, but this whole experience allowed me to get to know a new part of him. The entire process was incredibly personal, which allowed us to get even closer. The feelings [that came along with] creating my wedding dress never got old, I am still pinching myself.”

The bride didn’t go into the process with any preconceived ideas or expectation about what the end result should look like. “I had complete faith and trust in Galliano and his creative process,” she says. “I knew I was in good hands.” Galliano asked her to put a mood board together to give him an idea of what she was thinking. She did it—pulling references like butterflies, animals, walnuts, guitars, and dancing elephants to symbolize the important people in her life—but also told him not to be influenced by it as she wanted his vision to come alive. “The walnuts served as a representation of my grandmother as she grew up on a walnut farm,” Ivy says. “The guitars throughout the veil represent my father, who was a musician.”