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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband didn’t like how I looked on our wedding day

879 replies

PeppyDenimSheep · 17/02/2026 11:27

I’m not sure if I’m being overly sensitive or if I’m justified in feeling upset about this.
I got married last year and we only recently received our wedding photos. When we sat down to look through them together for the first time, there were lots of pictures of me getting ready with my bridesmaids before walking down the aisle. Obviously, my husband hadn’t seen any of that because he wasn’t in the bridal suite but when those photos came up, he quickly skipped past them without looking. I asked him to go back because I wanted to see them, there were special moments, like my mum helping me into my dress.
As he looked through some of the photos of me in my dress before I walked down the aisle, he said, “Jesus, there are SO many of you, you’re really playing up to the camera.” I actually found the wedding morning quite awkward. I hate being the centre of attention and I’m not a naturally “posey” person and he knows that. Having constant photos taken was outside my comfort zone but the photographer guided me and reassured me I would like how they turned out. Surprisingly, I actually liked the photos of myself, which is rare because I’m usually very self critical. My husband also made remarks about how the photographer seemed to focus on me all day and must have “loved” me. We had a husband-and-wife photography team, so it wasn’t a guy being creepy with me. I explained that photographers typically take more photos of the bride because of the dress, hair, makeup, and flowers, that’s just standard for weddings.

This isn’t the first time he’s made comments like that. In the lead-up to the wedding, he would say things like, “How comes you get a bridal suite? Why don’t I get a groom’s suite?” or make comments that he and his best man would be getting ready in a cleaning cupboard. He also said he could already tell the wedding would be “all about you.” Anyone who knows me knows I’m not that type of person.
A few days later, we showed the wedding photos to some family. My aunt asked him what he thought when he first saw me walking down the aisle and whether my dress was what he imagined. He replied, “I thought it was just a dress.” That comment, combined with the earlier ones, really upset me.
It’s also brought back other things from the wedding that didn’t bother me at the time because I was in such a happy bubblem, but now they do. The night before the wedding, he stayed up drinking with friends until 4 a.m. On the morning of the wedding, we had planned to exchange letters and asked the photographer and videographer to capture it. When my bridesmaid handed me his letter, I opened it in front of everyone with cameras pointed at me. (I already felt awkward being the centre of attention). When I opened it, it was actually a birthday card with a kids cartoon on the front and the word “birthday” crossed out and replaced with “wedding.” Inside, it just said, “To (my name), love (his name).”
People I’ve spoken to say he’s just being a typical man, that men don’t care about these things. I understand that and at the time, none of it really bothered me. But after the comments about me “playing up to the camera,” it’s made me rethink everything. Now I can’t seem to get it out of my head.

Am I being too sensitive?

OP posts:
HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 12:46

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 12:35

Or maybe he just doesn't really care about weddings? Maybe he doesn't feel like saying the cliches that are expected of him? Maybe he really loves his wife when she's making a cup of tea in her tatty dressing gown at home on a Monday morning and sees her as beautiful then? Or maybe he doesn't think like that at all, and she's his pal and companion, and he's not romantic and not inclined to give compliments. It's OK to be like that!

The card thing was obviously off the scale petty, immature, incondsiderate, whatever. But none of us are perfect, are we? I see the letters as a ridiculous, empty, meaningless stunt for the cameras. Maybe he did too?

The thing is, being a good husband doesn't mean being a brilliant groom or saying all the right things. (In my opinion!) And we really, really know nothing about him beyond his negative reactions to the wedding.

Being a good husband should at least mean being kind to your wife. That should be a bare minimum expectation.

He couldn't even do that.

Additup · 17/02/2026 12:46

MoreDangerousThanAWomanScorned · 17/02/2026 12:25

I wouldn't have wanted to do the letter thing either - but I'd have told DH that in the (highly unlikely!) event he'd suggested it. Instead, OP's husband went along with it, let her write a heartfelt letter and then took the piss out of it himself. At absolute, most generous best that shows a real mismatch and lack of communication between them. Much more likely, it shows him deliberately being spiteful.

Maybe he did tell her the letter was a performative cringefest and he didn't want to do it, but she insisted they still do it. Who knows 🤷‍♀️

Either way he sounds a bit of a PITA about the wedding in general, but maybe on a day to day basis is okay.

StickySitch · 17/02/2026 12:46

Octavia64 · 17/02/2026 12:03

Alternative perspective:

I wanted a small wedding. So did dh.

we got a fucking three ring circus as family all wanted to come.

both of us would say it definitely wasn’t the happiest day of our lives.
i hate having photos of me. We had no videos, one photographer and absolutely not any photos before the service. I can’t imagine anything I would hate more than a load of famiky fussing around me as I got ready and as for someone taking photos of it!

fortunately me and my dh felt the same way.

we both sighed a big sigh of relief when we got to the hotel and were like “thank fuck that’s over, we finally get away from all the people”,

if I’d been getting married to someone who insisted on photos and videos and letters and all that razzmatazz I think I’d probably have Trouble going along with it and I’d certainly have trouble keeping a straight face.

we were married 22 years.

Shame the husband didn’t listen to the OP then and made the wedding bigger than she wanted.

Clarabell77 · 17/02/2026 12:46

RosesAndHellebores · 17/02/2026 11:36

I'm on the fence. I got married 35 years ago. The photographer suggested coming to my mother's when I was getting ready. I said no - it felt like a ridiculous invasion of privacy and I didn't want any pictures of me putting on my tights with my hair in rollers.

We had photographs in the vestey and outside the church and a few more at the reception which we limited to 30 minutes because we preferred to be with our guests. No videos.

I agree with you and we did the same, all the OTT photos and other things people have nowadays make me cringe, it’s all so performative.

However, this doesn’t put me on the fence, all of this stuff is fairly normal now when people getting married and I think the OPs husband sounds completely awful, some red flag behaviour there.

tellmesomethingtrue · 17/02/2026 12:47

Yes you’re being too sensitive. You knew what he was like when you said ‘yes’

Anyahyacinth · 17/02/2026 12:47

A man so insecure he chooses to bully the person who has promised to love him for life...how low could anyone (him) fall?

As others have said do not have children with this error of a person and make plans for your own happiness..he is a write off

Wonderfulstuff · 17/02/2026 12:48

I'm not sure he is as keen on you as he on himself.

A normal reaction to the person you love and find attractive is 'oh you look lovely/pretty/sexy af' sadly not anything you've reported above.

RaininSummer · 17/02/2026 12:48

He sounds nasty.

StickySitch · 17/02/2026 12:48

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 12:35

Or maybe he just doesn't really care about weddings? Maybe he doesn't feel like saying the cliches that are expected of him? Maybe he really loves his wife when she's making a cup of tea in her tatty dressing gown at home on a Monday morning and sees her as beautiful then? Or maybe he doesn't think like that at all, and she's his pal and companion, and he's not romantic and not inclined to give compliments. It's OK to be like that!

The card thing was obviously off the scale petty, immature, incondsiderate, whatever. But none of us are perfect, are we? I see the letters as a ridiculous, empty, meaningless stunt for the cameras. Maybe he did too?

The thing is, being a good husband doesn't mean being a brilliant groom or saying all the right things. (In my opinion!) And we really, really know nothing about him beyond his negative reactions to the wedding.

If he doesn’t really care about weddings, why did he do this:

We both wanted the wedding, I orginally wanted to get married just us two and our close family but he said he wanted his friends there and then it just got biggger and bigger, we had around 60 guests in total.

He*made it into a big wedding and is now being churlish about it. Sounds like an idiot to me.

MoreDangerousThanAWomanScorned · 17/02/2026 12:49

Additup · 17/02/2026 12:46

Maybe he did tell her the letter was a performative cringefest and he didn't want to do it, but she insisted they still do it. Who knows 🤷‍♀️

Either way he sounds a bit of a PITA about the wedding in general, but maybe on a day to day basis is okay.

Well, in that case I would still think they have a big problem with compatibility and communication and that one of them is being unpleasant and dismissive of the other one's feelings, it would just go the other way!

Catpuss66 · 17/02/2026 12:49

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 12:09

Hi @PeppyDenimSheep from my perspective, your husband's attitude is entirely understandable!

All the things you're describing like the "bridal suite" and the getting ready photos, the letters, the communal viewing of wedding photos etc. sound boring, excessive and formulaic to me. It feels to me like people are in the grip of an actual madness when it comes to weddings.

That said, I get that it will have been incredibly important and meaningful to you. And to lots and lots of other women!

But the fact that your husband doesn't feel that way and doesn't admire the wedding you is entirely fine! It's not actually you, it's a dolled up, one-day-only version of you. That person will never be seen again! But he presumably loves you, the actual everyday you, very much.

But he's entitled to his own thoughts and opinions, including about the wedding.

It also seems very possible that he has very tolerantly allowed you to crack on with the wedding of your dreams. Which I suspect will have cost quite a lot of your shared money.

Don't confuse the wedding with the marriage! How is your relationship otherwise?

Edited

I suspect you are a man. He was mean to her on what was an important day to her. The whole thing wasn’t instigated by her he wanted the bigger wedding. If he loved her he would have made her feel special, but he didn’t these are Important milestones for women. She needs to be on alert made sure he doesn’t isolate her & make her financially dependent. Maybe this thread has made her take note, & not listen to an idiot like you.

SnoopyPajamas · 17/02/2026 12:49

Do you know what negging is, OP? This is what your husband is doing to you. He wants you small and self-doubting so he doesn't have to worry about you leaving him.

Life is too short to spend with someone like that. I'd leave.

pinkyredrose · 17/02/2026 12:50

SL2924 · 17/02/2026 12:36

It doesn’t sound like he likes you very much, OP. He sounds awful. What age is he? Are your friends already married? Does he feel like he’s settled?

I think it's the Op who's 'settled'!

Clarabell77 · 17/02/2026 12:50

I don’t think this behaviour has anything to do with whether he liked how you looked on your wedding day btw. He’s a bully.

Miranda65 · 17/02/2026 12:51

Are you happy in your actual marriage, OP? Because there is a lot of performative nonsense on wedding days, and he was possibly a bit underwhelmed by all of it.

But it's the marriage that's important, not the wedding - so how is that going? If all's well, then just laugh off the wedding photos stuff.

StickySitch · 17/02/2026 12:51

My aunt asked him what he thought when he first saw me walking down the aisle and whether my dress was what he imagined. He replied, “I thought it was just a dress.”

The only answer to this is, ‘the dress was beautiful’. Whether you are a friend, relative, colleague and most of all husband. People try so hard to excuse shitty behaviour on here. I feel embarrassed for them.

pictoosh · 17/02/2026 12:52

"I thought it was just a dress."

Mean, peevish and deliberately deflating for you imo. For whatever reason, he resents the attention you got at your wedding and wanted to bring you down a peg or two. Saying that in front of others is awful...he doesn't care what your family think of him and that's a red flag.

Chisbots · 17/02/2026 12:52

If he's like this about the wedding day, I suspect he may be very abusive if you have a baby, as he wouldn't the centre of attention then either.

Notonthestairs · 17/02/2026 12:52

Who on earth is trying to defend this shit behaviour directed at his wife?

If you dont like aspect of your wedding, you speak up BEFORE the wedding or you accept that it isn't precisely what you wanted but in the scheme of things its unimportant.

Small, petty, pathetic behaviour from someone who is supposed to love the Op.

5128gap · 17/02/2026 12:52

Massive red flags here OP that you've just married one of whinging self pitying types who think men are not given enough regard, and deeply resents women for it, including you. Does he comment that men have it hard while women take advantage for an easy life?

QuinqueremeofNiveneh · 17/02/2026 12:52

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 17/02/2026 12:46

Being a good husband should at least mean being kind to your wife. That should be a bare minimum expectation.

He couldn't even do that.

"Kind" means different things to different people.

And I don't think expecting a man who's not the romantic type and good with compliments to gush over wedding photos is "kind".

Frenchfrychic · 17/02/2026 12:52

Miranda65 · 17/02/2026 12:51

Are you happy in your actual marriage, OP? Because there is a lot of performative nonsense on wedding days, and he was possibly a bit underwhelmed by all of it.

But it's the marriage that's important, not the wedding - so how is that going? If all's well, then just laugh off the wedding photos stuff.

The man couldn’t even bring himself to give her a compliment when her aunt asked. Thays nothing about being underwhelmed by weddings and everything to do with being a cunt.

queenofwandss · 17/02/2026 12:52

Run OP while you can!

thesugarbumfairy · 17/02/2026 12:52

He doesn't like you. He's a dick. And it will only get worse, but you'll have kids and you'll end up trapped.
Realise this now. Don't waste your next couple of decades with this man.
I should have changed the wedding plans when mine called me a slapper whilst I was actually making my wedding bouquet.
I didn't because I thought it would all be fine. Its not fine. It was never fine.

MoreDangerousThanAWomanScorned · 17/02/2026 12:52

Miranda65 · 17/02/2026 12:51

Are you happy in your actual marriage, OP? Because there is a lot of performative nonsense on wedding days, and he was possibly a bit underwhelmed by all of it.

But it's the marriage that's important, not the wedding - so how is that going? If all's well, then just laugh off the wedding photos stuff.

I think it's 'the marriage that matters not the wedding' is supposed to refer to things like not spending lots of money on table decorations or not getting fussed if it rains. Your new husband being an absolute dick on and about your wedding day does seem to me to be a pretty strong indicator of the actual marriage.