Bride left heartbroken after dry cleaners lose 150-year-old dress

WHEN bride Tess Newall lovingly put on the 150 year-old wedding dress made by her great great grandmother - it was the final piece of her perfect day
Tess Newall in her wedding dress also worn by her great great grandmother. Picture: Seth Baines PhotoTess Newall in her wedding dress also worn by her great great grandmother. Picture: Seth Baines Photo
Tess Newall in her wedding dress also worn by her great great grandmother. Picture: Seth Baines Photo

But now Tess has told how that dream has “turned into a nightmare” after a Capital dry cleaners went bust and the heirloom missing.

Now heartbroken Tess has made an emotional plea to Evening News readers for help in tracing the treasured dress.

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“It was so amazing and emotional to wear it,” said Tess, 29. “And so horrible to lose it. It’s part of the family and I can’t bear for this to be the end.”

A shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: ContributedA shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: Contributed
A shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: Contributed

Tess found the dress in the attic of grandmother Jojo’s Morningside home after breaking news of her engagement last September.

“Jojo told me she might have a dress for me,” recalled Tess. “I went looking in the attic and there among boxes of buttons was a big hatbox.

“It was so dusty and covered in cobwebs. It must’ve been there for at least 50 years.”

Inside the box, Tess found the dress - along with a veil the family still have - made by great great grandmother Dora Torin in 1870.

A shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: ContributedA shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: Contributed
A shot from the wedding day. Tess Newall is on the right of the picture. Picture: Contributed

“It’s the most beautiful handmade, Edwardian lace,” said Tess, recalling the moment she saw the dress for the first time.

Tess, a freelance set designer, made some minor alterations at her London home.

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“It wasn’t completely white so I got it cleaned and slightly altered it because it didn’t suit me. I went and found a few little pieces to add to it. It was unique.”

The dress came with Tess and husband Alfred, 30, for a wedding service and reception in the village of Morham, near Haddington, where Tess grew up.

“It was just am amazing day,” said Tess, who Cargilfield Preparatory School. “It had a real old-fashioned feel to it as we walked down to the kirk across fields.”

The newlyweds set off for a driving honeymoon around France, while mother Sally Oyler and father Patrick Gammell, who still live at Morham, dropped off the dress for cleaning.

Patrick, Vice Lord-Lieutenant of East Lothian, chose Kleen Cleaners in St Mary’s Street because it had a Royal Warrant.

But unbeknown to the family, the business had changed hands and the new owners went bust in October.

Despite frantically trying to track down the dress and retaining a cleaning receipt for £110, Tess and her family are none the wiser as to its whereabouts.

“It was really difficult for my parents to tell me - my mum was in tears.

“If it’s anywhere, it’ll be in a vintage wedding dress fair. I have cousins who might want to wear it and maybe my own children and grandchildren.”