
The Minority Bride: Podcast Episode #78
Alyssa: Hi, welcome to Ask the Doulas. Itâs Alyssa and Iâm talking with Gaby again if you remember her. Last time she told us her lovely birth stories. Hi Gaby.
Gaby: Hi Alyssa, good to be back.
Alyssa: I want to learn about your business. So Connieâs Bridal Boutique.
Gaby: Yes.
Alyssa: Whoâs Connie? Beause youâre not Connie.
Gaby: No. Weâre not Connie. Connieâs actually the name that the original owner gave the store, it was her nickname. Her original name was Veit Vu, sheâs a cute little Vietnamese lady. Maybe 5 feet.
Alyssa: Okay.
Gaby: She was a powerhouse of a woman. These dresses get heavy, so youâd just see her hauling dresses back and forth. My grandmother used to work with her and when she decided to retire we purchased the brand and the store.
Alyssa: Okay.
Gaby: And we kind of molded it a little bit more towards our personalities, and growth, and developed it a little bit further.
Alyssa: Okay. So Iâve been in your store. Itâs huge! Itâs not little, itâs huge. I walked in and Iâm like, âOh my God! Look at all this space.â
Gaby: Yes!
Alyssa: So tell me what did you change? Whatâs your target market? Do you have a certain type of dress? Do you kind of focus on one area or is it a pretty broad range?
Gaby: Yeah, when we originally bought the store, if weâre getting down to nitty gritty business, we used to be on 44th and Kalamazoo. I think that was her second or third location. The target audience when we originally bought it, was for brides looking for dresses and formal gowns from $100 to, I think it was, $800. Around there. We began molding it to a little bit of a higher price range, just because that good chunk of $100 – $800 dresses, a lot of that is online. So itâs not really long term, sustainable, at least for how we run it. Which is a lot of sample and special orders, we donât have stock of the same dress in 30 sizes.
Alyssa: Okay.
Gaby: We might have a couple in a small and a large, but most of what we do is a custom dress, custom measurements, custom length. We specialize in that and customizations, custom additions, and our clientele is the minority bride. That falls in so many categories. It could be âlast minute,â so less than 6 months. We often do weddings like 2 weeks, 1 week, we can have a quick turn around time. My grandmother is magic as far as alterations! Our formal bridal gowns are anywhere from $600 to $3,000 – $5,000. Weâre kind of snug in the middle between Davidâs and then you have the beautiful Renee Austin and Beckerâs, who is on the higher end.
Alyssa: Right.
Gaby: Weâre kind of snug in the middle for our minority brides and whether that be size, whether thatâs brides that purchase and then they go and get married and they have beautiful African ceremonies in Africa, so thatâs kind of the whole other package. Beause theyâre buying for people where bridesmaids arenât all here. We serve a lot of our âminority bridesâ that have that spunky and creative need.
Alyssa: Okay. Yeah, when I went in it was your grandmother and your mother.
Gaby: Yes!
Alyssa: You said sometimes your sisterâs even there?
Gaby: Sometimes my sisterâs there. On Saturdays, itâs me and my sister comes to help on and off. I kind of finagled my way to be like, âGrandma you can take Saturdays off and Iâll be here on Saturdays.â So now sheâs there Monday through Friday, which is when our alterations and more complicated orders if she needs to kind of see as far as detailed illusion neckline, or anything like that. Then weâll see them Monday through Friday and on Saturday weâre just seeing brides in their beginning phases and if they need basic fittings, then I can, of course, do that. I can fit you and pin you, but if anyoneâs cutting your dress, itâs her.
Alyssa: Itâs gonna be grandma.
Gaby: Yeah, itâs gonna be grandma!
Alyssa: So we learned last time that you have two children. How do you balance a three-year-old, a six-year-old, and helping to run a bridal shop?
Gaby: Yeah, Iâm extremely lucky in the flexibility that not only working with my grandmother but having ⌠working with my grandmother in our own business, close to home. So itâs kind of like a great little triangle of support. So she definitely wanted to see the grandkids, so when I had my first daughter and even with my son, I think I worked up until a couple of days before I gave birth. If not, the day before. I was very active, I donât like to just down. When I gave birth, it was strap them up, literally carried them on and off up until they got too big to be carried. That was great! I could bring them in whenever and if I really couldnât bring them in, I didnât have to come into work. It wasnât like I had to bring in a doctorâs note, and then I could work from home or work on off days. So I can move my schedule around pretty freely. So thatâs definitely been a great opportunity for me to work, but also raise my kids and be as involved as I need to be or they want me to be. If they want to go chaperone, itâs great during the week because weâre not too busy. So I can say, âHey, Iâm not gonna be here until… today or until next time. Iâm gonna go in the morning, Iâm gonna be with my daughter or my son all day and then they can come back and work.â Sometimes work means I have to work until 9 or after they go to sleep, Iâm gonna have to finish that, or Iâm answering emails in the middle of the night.
Alyssa: Typical business owner stuff. I feel like Iâm doing that all the time. You take out a chunk of time during the day to spend with friends, or family, or your children, and you always have to make up for it later.
Gaby: Right, you make up for it later.
Alyssa: Thatâs like the pros and cons, right? Of having your own business.
Gaby: Exactly. Itâs definitely been a balance for them, as well. Because we open on Saturdays, so itâs not like we can just do all kinds of fun activities on Saturdays. My friends are like, âOh, weâre having birthday parties.â And Iâm like, âThatâs great, but Iâm at work.â So we canât really just take that off. Itâs Sundays. Everybody on Sunday kind of has a different schedule. In our industry, our busy timeâs during the summer. So our vacations are in the winter.
Alyssa: Which is perfect! You want to get out of Michigan in the winter.
Gaby: We do! Everybodyâs like, âYou want to go to the beach?â Iâm like, âYes!â
Alyssa: On Sunday, I will!
Gaby: On Sunday, I will. Or Sunday usually ends up being trying to manage your household in half a day. Like a crazy person! That you have not been able to do the whole week. We kind of balance that out and my friends are like, âYou never come out!â Like, itâs not really vacation ever for us, unless itâs winter. And during wintertime, regular jobs theyâre still working, but we can be like, âOh, weâll take December off.â Because weâve been working nonstop until December and weâll just take a couple of weeks off. So itâs kind of a balance of where do you ⌠itâs good to find other entrepreneurs because they have similar rhythms. Where itâs like, âIâm kind of just checking to see if youâre breathing for six months.â And then you can really hang out with them.
Alyssa: Right.
Gaby: During the slow time Iâm like, âJust send a quick text like, âHey, are you alive?â Yeah, weâre just working away. Itâs been good to connect with other entrepreneurs and other busy moms that are kind of doing more.
Alyssa: Yeah and I think itâs important because we are definitely a specific breed of business owners and mothers. Because I might have, like this morning, I randomly had time to go for a walk around the lake and what did I do? I texted a bunch of people, but the only one that responded was the other mom who owns her own business. She was like, âOh yeah, I can get out for an hour.â So it is good to have that network because otherwise you do kind of feel isolated. Thinking all of these other moms that work during the day and then at night maybe they want to get together, but thatâs when I actually need to spend time with my kid.
Gaby: Right, right! Thatâs kid time. My free time could be, âOh yeah, I can meet with you in the morning when the kids are at school.â I can kind of plan that out. But when I pick the kids up from school, I need to make sure that Iâm with the kids because Saturday/Sunday. One day I was working on putting crystals on a dress and that was consecutive days of working past midnight. I think the kids came one day to the shop and they like slept in the stuff for a couple of hours. Iâm just like, âWe gotta get this done! We gotta get this done!â So we donât have time blocks, itâs definitely an adventure to find people that match your schedules. Also interests, but also match the schedule of when you can free time and then understand that maybe I will be free three Sundays in a row, maybe you wonât see me for 5 months.
Alyssa: Yeah, I used to be able to plan ahead. Now Iâm like, âI donât know.â Can I go for a walk tomorrow? I donât know, text me tomorrow and Iâll see.
Gaby: I will know an hour before!
Alyssa: Right!
Gaby: I think weâre maybe doing a month ahead of time. In my house with family events, Iâm usually like letâs bring out the book of calendars. Everybody just dish out appointment cards. Like, âHereâs your Motherâs Day event, hereâs this, and hereâs that.â And now weâre just like, âWe donât know what weâre going to do.â Sometimes youâre just overwhelmed that you just donât do anything.
Alyssa: Yeah, to have a weekend of nothing is totally fine.
Gaby: I donât want to plan anything. You know what sounds good? Just being home, and cooking, and eating.
Alyssa: I think itâs the other side of owning a business that people donât realize. You know, âOh, you have so much free time.â Or, âOh, you run your own schedule.â But thereâs this opposite side of it where you do feel, like I said, isolated or that nobody quite understands. So I love these mom groups, like how I met you at the Mom Brain group. Thereâs always something to talk about because weâre always going through these same struggles. They might be a little bit different, but deep down weâre moms and we own our own businesses and we know what itâs like to be like, âOh, yeah. Iâm working until midnight tonight and I still have to get my kid up. I havenât made lunch for school. Oh, yeah, and itâs library day and I donât know where the library book is.â All these 20 little things, all these little details, but you still have a business to run.
Gaby: Right. Thereâs still something else that kind of, depending, is like two different ⌠which, being a mom in itself has so many independent tasks that happen individually. Like these completely unrelated tasks that happen independently.
Alyssa: Mm-hmm, but weâre doing them simultaneously, often.
Gaby: Yes, yes! With two different children. One is your business and two is your actual kids that are kind of just, âI need all this stuff.â And then all of a sudden, business might have an emergency or your kid might have an emergency and if you donât build those connections, you might be left struggling a little bit.
Alyssa: Well, it would be really easy to burn out. If you didnât have, like you said, if you didnât work with your family and itâs super close to home, you have that support network built in. If somebody owned a business, had children, didnât have family, didnât have friends, didnât have a support network, and had no plan in place for these emergencies, whether it was family or business, you burn out.
Gaby: Yeah, I would imagine youâd just kind of be sitting there feeling lonely. Itâs not even like, âSomebody come and help!â But itâs just the pure connection of like, âI just want to talk to somebody.â Or just a quick text to kind of get your mind out of maybe something serious thatâs happening. Okay, then you can relax and go back and focus on your job, or your kids, or whatever it is. Thatâs so important to be able to have that extra support, in a multitude of forms, kind of sprinkled all over your life so that you can progress and move through the really hard, complicated times. In the end, you love your job. Thatâs why youâre doing it! Thatâs why weâre crazy still there. Weâre still holding on because you love what you do.
Alyssa: Yeah, you work with brides who are in this specific zone and weâre working with new moms who are in this specific zone. Although many of our clients are probably, Iâd say the majority of them are married, we do have some who are pregnant and then getting married or getting married while pregnant. So do you work with clients who are pregnant and need a dress? You say the minority, that would be the minority. How do you help? Â How does that dress grow with the belly if theyâre not getting married right away?
Gaby: It definitely depends. The first thing for us is to make that bride feel comfortable. Some brides are just chill, theyâre just loving it, theyâre embracing what is happening. Some brides are nervous in the way of like, âThis is not how I envisioned it.â Or it was how they envisioned it and they were fine with it, but thereâs an outside pressure. So we want to make sure that that is relieved. Because once you are in a good, happy, neutral position, you can really see yourself in a wedding dress, calmy. Not like, âI need to cover this or I need to cover that.â You just want something that fits and thatâs comfortable and it depends. Some brides are going to grow, right? Theyâre still going to be pregnant when they get married, so we have to talk about that. Are you going to come in the week before for alterations? Are we going to hold out until the week before? Couple of days before? Alter it and then it will fit and then take it? So it might be a last minute alteration. Or sometimes they buy it when theyâre pregnant and then theyâll have the baby ⌠itâs a bit of a guessing game. Are you going to buy it smaller? Are we going to allow for alteration costs to make it smaller? Is it a shape of a dress that can fit both ways? Are you going to be comfortable? Is it too tight for baby? You need to think about can you sit down, can you stand? Because youâre not as agile, though Iâm clumsy anyway, so that was not a good clumsy pregnant mom that is wobbling through a bridal store was a funny scene. We just sit and talk with them and say, âHow are you feeling?â Some moms have had multiple kids, so theyâre like, âI donât growâ or, âTomorrow Iâm going to be double the size. Iâm just telling you for now.â And thatâll be fine. I had one bride, she was so sweet. She was like, âIâm going to be this size by the time I get married.â And she was. She knew! Sheâd already had children, so she was like, âIâm pregnant, Iâm going to give birth and my bodyâs going to go relatively back to normal by the time Iâm there.â It really ends up being a matter of a last minute alteration and just understanding that we just need mom and baby to be comfortable. If you want a nice, snug dress, it might have to be a different fabric versus a more stretchier fabric. Not because we canât make it fit, I mean you can cut anything to fit anything, but just because itâs a little bit more flexible and movable, and not so restricting. Just a little bit more of guiding and consulting and youâre going to look beautiful! Everythingâs going to come out good. Donât worry about it!
Alyssa: So if we have any moms who are thinking about getting married, where do they find you? Tell us website, phone number, address. Whatâs the best place for people to find you?
Gaby: Yeah, well we have multiple ways of contacting us. We are on 28th Street, pasT Burlingame. We are next to Margeâs Donuts, so if youâre pregnant itâs always good.
Alyssa: I was going to mention that. Like, âOh!â When I came to visit you, I couldnât leave without visiting Margeâs on the way out.
Gaby: Yes, stop by and have a yummy snack. We have brides that come in with a very like, âIâm going to plan [to lose weight]!â If that is your healthy goal, weâre going to support you and empower you for it. But we donât want you to be like, you need to all of a sudden only eat lettuce for the next six months. We want to make sure that you are being healthy with your path and if this is how your fiance is seeing you right now. Like he proposed to you right now, heâs loving you, heâs going to care for you, heâs going to embrace you no matter what. We want to dress you how you are, not with the pressure that you have from somebody else. You can find us next to Margeâs Donuts. Go ahead, we support your purchase of donuts, cakes, custard-filled pastries, bring us one on the way back if youâre coming before! We are on Facebook, itâs Connieâs Bridal. You can find us on Instagram, you can give us a call at (616) 455-5233. Our website is the same, which I think nowadays is the easiest thing to do.
Alyssa: Cool. What about the LGBTQ community? Have you ever had two brides? Because we do get calls from-
Gaby: Yeah, of course. Like I said, thatâs our main focus is to make you feel comfortable, and empowered in your decision. If youâre wanting a suit, if youâre wanting two dresses, if you want a mini dress, if you want to alter something, we can do that. What I mainly see is the hesitation. Come on in, if you need extra time. Thatâs for any brides if you feel like youâre going to need extra time, if youâre going to need extra space, if youâre going to need extra quiet, or youâre going to need extra quiet because your support group is extra loud! We like to accommodate for that. Two bridess, we just want to support and celebrate alongside of you.
Alyssa: I love it. Thank you for sharing.
Gaby: Yeah, youâre welcome.
Alyssa: So yeah, check her out if youâre in the market for a wedding dress. As always, you can find us at goldcoastdoulas.com, Instagram, Facebook, and you can listen to our podcasts on SoundCloud and iTunes.