Well, for a start the bride has to be wearing some sort of variation of white. Some unconventional brides like to buck the trend and wear red or even black, but at a traditional wedding the bride will be wearing, at the very least, ivory. The historical reason for this is to show "purity", but at a modern traditional wedding I believe the main reason that the bride wears white is so that she will stand out and be recognized - at all times and from all distances - as unmistakeably the bride. (It is, of course, highly unacceptable for anybody else apart from the bride to wear white to a wedding.)
And the bridesmaids or flower girls? Well, at some weddings these days the bride will choose a colour, and the bridesmaids will then be allowed to choose whatever dress they like provided it is in the allocated colour. At a traditional wedding, however, this medley of styles would look messy. At a traditional wedding the bridesmaids will all wear exactly the same style in exactly the same fabric, though probably in different sizes.
The groom at a traditional wedding will normally wear a suit. Perhaps he'll wear a normal tie with it or perhaps he'll wear a bow-tie, and if it's a rather flashy traditional wedding he might wear a top hat. However, if the groom is Scottish he may wear the traditional Scottish outfit for men, the kilt.
As for the guests, the men will probably be wearing either a suit if it's an English wedding or a kilt if it's Scottish, because for some reason, while it would be outrageous if all the women turned up dressed as a bride, it is perfectly acceptable for all the men attending the wedding to be wearing exactly the same outfit as the groom.
The women guests of course have the duty or the freedom - depending on what way you look at it - to wear almost anything they want as long as it is smart. Preferably it would involve a very large brimmed brightly coloured hat because no traditional British wedding would be complete without a scattering of mulit-coloured hats - the larger and more ridiculous-looking, the better.
Most people have very few occasions to wear a special hat, and if you can't wear one at a wedding, when can you wear one? Unless you're someone who goes to the races every season.
Hats, dresses, suits, kilts, trouser suits, skirts, shawls, saris, and even smart shorts. All of these things would not be out of place at a traditional British wedding.
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