Jennifer Wu

Collection

Bio

Wu is a New York–based Chinese bridal and eveningwear designer, born in Beijing and raised in California. Her work is heavily shaped by cultural roots, nature, and emotional memory. Wu founded a floral design business while in school, where her work continues to influence her design approach. Working with natural materials like silk and wool, she creates pieces that honor tradition and personal narrative, guided by a philosophy of thoughtful craftsmanship, subtle symbolism, and everlasting designs.

Jennifer Guoxiao Wu

Wu's work is heavily rooted in nature, cultures, femininity, and emotional memory. She uses natural materials like silk, cotton, and wool to craft garments that tell stories and honor personal and cultural rituals.

Her process begins with narrative: drawing from floral language, cultural intersections, and historical fashion. Every step—sketching, draping, construction—is intentional and layered.
This collection emerged from a time when I stepped away from fashion and gained clarity about what matters and why I create.

During a sophomore gap year, I started a floral design studio, witnessing life up close through baby showers, weddings, and funerals—seeing how flowers quietly accompany moments of joy, change, and loss. They revealed a simple truth: life, like a bloom, unfolds in stages—fragile at the start, unexpectedly full in its growth, and ultimately softening into a different kind of beauty.

This bridal and eveningwear collection translates that journey into fabric and form, honoring life’s cycles and celebrating beauty not only at its peak, but in its transformation.
Image: Becoming, Unfolding, Fading - The witness of our lives
Image: Witnesses to life’s most meaningful transitions — from birth to death, joy to sorrow.
Image: Look I
Silk wool overlayed with crinkled organza. Lined with a boned bustier. Skirt lined with Silk satin. Styled with a Tulle hooded veil.
Image: Look II
Silk Wool with boned side bustles, overlayed with Nylon tulle. Lined with a boned bustier. Skirt lined with silk satin.
Image: Look III
Bias - cut Korean wool cowl neck dress, with a boned under-bust corset tiered-tulle skirt
Image: Look IV
Bias-draped silk chiffon, hand pleated and hand sewn to boned power-net longline corset.
Image: Look V
Boned power-net longline corset. Styled with natural flower dyed silk organza Juliette veil.