Breathtaking.
That’s the word being used to describe Hailey Bieber née Baldwin’s formal wedding gown.
Last week, the model married Justin Bieber a second time during a ceremony at the luxury resort Montage Palmetto Bluff in Bluffton, South Carolina.
The pair’s “I Do” No. 2, attended by family and friends, comes after Bieber, 25, and Baldwin, 22, became engaged last summer and secretly married months later at a New York City courthouse.
Bieber confirmed in November that he was “a married man.”
This time around, the singer shared wedding photos of himself and his wife (who months ago started going by Hailey Bieber) on his official Instagram account.
“My wife is (fire emoji),” the caption read on two pictures (picture 1, picture 2) of the couple stamped “The Biebers” and “September 30, 2019.”
The couple, who first met as young teens, opened up about their union this year in a “Vogue” interview, with Baldwin saying, “I’m not going to sit here and lie and say it’s all a magical fantasy. It’s always going to be hard.”
“It’s a choice. You don’t feel it every single day,” Baldwin said. “You don’t wake up every day saying, ‘I’m absolutely so in love and you are perfect.’ That’s not what being married is.”
But she added, “There’s something beautiful about it anyway—about wanting to fight for something, commit to building with someone.”
“We’re really young, and that’s a scary aspect,” she said. “We’re going to change a lot. But we’re committed to growing together and supporting each other in those changes.”
On Monday, Mrs. Bieber celebrated the one-week anniversary of their latest ceremony by sharing some photos (picture 1, picture 2, picture 3) of her wedding gown on her official Instagram account.
“Last Monday was the most special day of my life,” one of her captions read.
According to People magazine, she “walked down the aisle in a lace off-the-shoulder, long-sleeve Off-White wedding dress with mermaid-style skirt and long, sheer veil that featured designer Virgil Abloh’s signature block lettering.”
The lettering on the veil read “‘Till Death Do Us Part.”