After the confetti settles and the last slice of cake is gone, your wedding dress is the one keepsake that deserves extra love. Whether you plan to save it for sentimental reasons, pass it down, or resell it to another bride, proper wedding dress cleaning and preservation is the secret to keeping it in pristine condition. In this guide, you’ll discover the best wedding dress preservation kit, learn how to clean a wedding dress, how to store a wedding dress long term, and more! Let’s get started so your gown can look just as flawless in 20 years as it did when you walked down the aisle.
► Ready to preserve your gown? Order a wedding dress preservation kit today and check it off your post-wedding to-do list.

What Is Wedding Dress Cleaning and Preservation
Cleaning removes visible and invisible stains like sweat, perfume, champagne, makeup, and grass. Invisible sugars are sneaky and can oxidize into yellow or brown spots over time. Cleaning is step one.
Preservation is long term protection. After cleaning and pressing, your gown is packed with acid free tissue in an acid free, lignin free box designed to slow aging, keep light and dust away, and prevent permanent creasing.
Is Wedding Dress Preservation Worth It
Yes if any of these sound like you:
- You want to keep your gown looking like your wedding day for photos, anniversaries, or a future heirloom.
- You plan to resell and want top resale value.
- Your dress has delicate fabrics like silk, lace, organza, or beadwork that need protection.
If you plan to repurpose right away or you are not sentimental, a thorough professional cleaning without preservation can be enough. You can always preserve later after a final try on.
Timeline: When To Clean and Preserve
- Day 0 to 3: Hang your dress by the loops, not the straps. Air it out away from heat and sunlight.
- Day 1 to 14: Book cleaning. The sooner the better for food, wine, and dirt. Rush service can help with stubborn stains.
- Within 6 weeks: Most gowns can be fully cleaned and preserved in this window depending on workload and stain complexity.
How Wedding Dress Cleaning and Preservation Works
- Inspection: Techs map stains, beadwork, lace, and trims. They test for colorfastness.
- Pre treatment: Targeted stain work for hem dirt, grass, food, deodorant, and makeup.
- Cleaning: Solvent or wet cleaning depending on fiber. Eco friendly options exist. Beadwork is protected.
- Rinse and Press: Fabric appropriate rinse, then gentle pressing or steaming to restore shape.
- Preservation packing: Acid free tissue, muslin wrap, and an archival box with a viewing window or fully closed box. Gloves used during packing.
- Sealing and Return: Box is sealed or secured. You get handling instructions and a storage guide.
Every provider has a slightly different workflow. The key is fiber safe cleaning and archival packing.
Wedding Dress Cleaning and Preservation Costs
Typical ranges vary by fabric, embellishment, stains, and whether you add accessories like a veil or overskirt.
- Cleaning only: commonly starts in the low hundreds.
- Cleaning + preservation: often mid hundreds and up depending on intricacy.
- Delicate couture or extensive beading: higher due to hand work.
Ask for an itemized estimate that covers stain work, insured shipping if applicable, and a written warranty.
How To Choose a Wedding Dress Preservation Company
Use these questions to vet your cleaner like a pro:
- Do you specialize in bridal gowns and delicate fabrics like silk and lace
- Is cleaning done in house or sent to a partner facility
- Which cleaning methods do you use and why for my fabric
- How do you protect beadwork and appliques during cleaning
- What is your policy for invisible stains that surface later
- Is there a lifetime or multi year anti yellowing warranty in writing
- Do you include acid free tissue, muslin, and an archival quality box
- Is shipping insured both ways and how is the dress tracked
- Can I see before and after photos of similar gowns
TIP: Want an easy, done-for-you kit? Many brides use this wedding dress preservation kit that ships straight to your door with insured return shipping.
DIY Spot Cleaning vs Professional Care
Some quick fixes are safe. Others are not. When in doubt, do less and hand it to a pro.
| Situation | Safe at home | Call a pro |
|---|---|---|
| Loose surface dirt at hem | Let dry, then gently brush with a clean soft toothbrush or garment brush. | |
| Fresh clear beverage drip | Blot gently with white cotton cloth. No rubbing. | |
| Red wine, lipstick, foundation, deodorant | Targeted solvents needed to avoid rings and dye lift. | |
| Silk satin, raw silk, or beaded tulle | Special handling and tests required. | |
| Mud or grass set into hem | Soil removal without abrasion to fibers. |
How To Store Your Gown After Preservation
- Keep the box in a cool, dry place away from sunlight. Think bedroom closet, not attic or basement.
- Use a wedding dress storage box like this:
- Store flat if possible to avoid shifting. If upright, support the box so it does not bow.
- Handle with clean hands or cotton gloves.
- Do not store near heaters, vents, or plumbing.
- Check every year for any moisture issues in the storage area.
Want to wear it again for an anniversary photo or vow renewal Take the dress out, enjoy it, then have a pro press and repack. Easy.
Compare Your Wedding Dress Care Options
| Option | What you get | Best for | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clean only | Professional stain removal and pressing. No archival box. | Brides who want to resell soon or plan to wear again within a year. | Less long term protection. Needs careful storage setup. |
| Clean + preserve | Full cleaning, pressing, acid free packing, archival box, handling guide. | Most brides who want to keep the gown looking photo ready long term. | Higher cost up front. |
| Museum level preservation | Custom muslin wrap, archival materials, optional nitrogen flush or sealed environment. | Heirloom couture or historically significant garments. | Premium pricing and longer turnaround. |
Wedding Dress Cleaning and Preservation Checklist
- Hang by loops and air out right after the wedding.
- Document stains with quick photos in natural light.
- Get 2 to 3 quotes from bridal specialists and compare what is included.
- Confirm insured shipping or schedule a local drop off.
- Approve stain notes and cleaning method before work starts.
- Ask for a written warranty and care instructions.
- Store your box in a cool, dry box or closet away from sunlight.
Wedding Dress Cleaning and Preservation FAQs
How soon should I clean my wedding dress?
As soon as you can. Fresh stains lift more easily and reduce the risk of oxidation that causes yellowing.
Can I open the preservation box later?
Yes. Many modern boxes are designed to be opened and resealed. Use clean hands or gloves and repack with acid free tissue. If you fully remove the dress to wear, have it professionally pressed and repacked after.
What if my gown is silk or heavily beaded?
Choose a provider with bridal specialization. Silk and beadwork need targeted solvents and protection methods.
Can a cleaner remove grass stains and city grime from the hem?
In most cases yes. Set in soil may leave a faint shadow on light fibers, but a specialist will reduce it significantly and prevent further damage.
Should I include my veil?
Yes. Veils are usually cleaned and preserved with the gown so the fabrics age at the same rate. Ask if there is an accessory slot in the box.
What if I want to sell my dress?
Do a professional clean at minimum. Buyers pay more for freshly cleaned gowns with care documentation. You can preserve after the sale if the next bride wants it.
Is at home preservation a thing?
If you understand archival materials and have a climate controlled storage space, you can do a basic version. Most brides prefer the convenience and guarantee of a professional service.
What causes yellowing?
Oxidation from sugars and body oils, exposure to light, lignin in non archival papers, and heat and humidity. Cleaning plus archival materials slows all of that down.
Bottom line: Clean your gown promptly, choose a preservation option that fits your plans, and store it smart. That is how you keep your wedding dress as beautiful as the day you said I do.
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information. Always follow fiber specific care advice from a professional who can inspect your gown in person.
Hope it helps!
xo
Emma
P.S. Next up: don’t forget to preserve your wedding bouquet!



