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Designer Starts GoFundMe After Claiming Bride 'Stole' Her Wedding Dress – But Who Was Telling The Truth?

Weddings can be stressful enough as it is between deciding who doesn’t make the cut and wanting to cut the problematic in-laws you can’t get rid of. But have you ever considered the nightmarish scenario of something going wrong with the bride’s wedding dress? It feels like TikTok has brought a shocking number of horror stories to light surrounding hopeful brides who spent thousands on dream wedding dresses, all for something horrible to go wrong in the eleventh hour of their wedding day. But a recent drama between a bride and her dressmaker has truly entered a whole new ballgame on TikTok.

The wedding dress designer hopped on TikTok to drop a story with a huge hook: after spending five months creating a custom gown, a bride “stole” the wedding dress for her big day without paying. The internet quickly turned on the bride for doing the small business owner so dirty. Social media warriors left bad reviews for places the woman worked, ripped her apart on social media, and even came for her friends. Except, it turns out the “theft” wasn’t as simple as it may have originally seemed after the bride shared her side of the story. Here’s the Casze wedding dress TikTok drama explained.

Why did Casze say a client “stole” her wedding dress?

@casze Link in bio. Story time on other post I put so much time , detail and love into this dress. I shipped it out to her and she blocked us on everything. ☹️ her husband tik tok is @David Wells ♬ original sound – CASZE

On the weekend of August 24, 2024, the TikTok account for dress company Casze posted a very eye-catching TikTok. The account shared a luxurious video of a jewel-encrusted ballgown shimmering under the power of a thousand ring lights with the caption: “when you spent 5 months making this wedding dress just for the client to steal it without paying.” After another video teasing the situation (“POV: The dress the bride stole”), followers were naturally dying to know what the hell happened. In a storytime with her face just out of view, Casze owner Cenderra answered the question everyone wanted to know: how was it possible for a bride to steal a dress? Cenderra stated “I shipped it out of good faith” because it was a “rushed order bridal gown.” The bride, Raylee (whose social media accounts Cenderra inserted on screen in her video), was supposed to pay the “balance” of the invoice after Cenderra “[made] sure the dress was perfect, making sure that everything was good…because I knew her wedding was so soon.”

@casze Full story for those asking, hundreds of hours dedicated work to complete the dress before time. She not only stole from me but from all the people who helped create the couture dress !! Why take it and not pay or give it back !!🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 link in my bio for the help #casze #raylee ♬ original sound – CASZE

Cenderra goes on to allege in a lot of words that Raylee and her mother ignored Casze’s multiple reminders for payment and intentionally didn’t disclose when they received the dress before finally telling Cenderra “the dress [might not] work.” Cenderra insisted if the dress wasn’t going to be paid for in full or worn that, they should ship it back. Because Raylee wouldn’t agree, Cenderra claims she booked a flight to Raylee’s wedding destination in order to physically retrieve the dress herself. Cenderra alleges that she gave Raylee warnings up until the final boarding of her flight that she was on her way, but she ultimately didn’t end up confronting Raylee in person. She did start a GoFundMe to help pay back the time and efforts of her staff she claims Raylee left hanging.

Raylee’s Side Of The Wedding Dress Drama

@rayleeruk stay tuned for pt2. Videoing it rn👍🏼 #greenscreen #Rayleerukavina #Casze #Rayleeweddingdress #thetruthofRaysdress ♬ original sound – Raylee

After refraining from chiming in with her side of the story because she was trying to enjoy her wedding weekend, Raylee clapped back with multiple receipts that alleged the opposite of what Cenderra told the internet. According to Raylee, the dress was ordered in February and was not rushed as a last-minute order. She showed many texts of her conversations with “Cen,” discussing the multiple delays from Casze’s end, including postponed wedding dress fittings, a delayed delivery date, and a very communicative back and forth about the dress’ whereabouts once it had shipped with timestamps. From Raylee’s records, she didn’t just “ghost” without payment. She showed alleged texts where she expressed that the dress was unwearable with the full skirt and suggested multiple methods of reconciling, including sending back the skirt or getting a partial refund. When Cenderra rejected Raylee’s options, Raylee said they could continue discussing after her wedding, but for the weekend, she needed to go offline to focus on celebrating her marriage.

In addition to screenshots, Raylee showed footage of her in the final dress, which looks remarkably different from the angles of the gown Casze featured on their socials. From the videos and photos Raylee showed, the train was not centered in the middle of the bust, and the jewels Raylee alleged were stuck on with glue were not cohesive with the design she agreed to. Raylee’s sister confirmed to Distractify that the dress did not fit Raylee despite multiple fittings.

What happened to Casze since Raylee’s response?

@alexandrabuenotx This is why i said if there were actually pictures of Raylee in the original dress at the altar, like so many claimed existed but were deleted, they would have been posted. Just because you delete it doesnt mean it goes away! #casze #raylee #weddingdressgate ♬ original sound – ༝༚༝༚ Alexandra Bueno

Casze posted the sketches of Raylee’s dress next to their footage of the final product (which some internet detectives are having trouble believing is the same dress Raylee got) to prove they followed the design. The atelier also stated in a since-deleted TikTok featuring videos of Raylee looking excited at her fittings that if Raylee had a problem with the dress being late, she should’ve “cut the contract then, cut the whole deal then, if that was a dealbreaker” instead of “using it as an excuse to not pay.”

While Casze has turned off comments, Raylee has received an outpouring of support and apologies from those who said they believed one side of the story before giving her a chance to respond. Other customers of Casze’s have chimed in to share their experiences (some happy reviews and some who alleged similar problems with prom dresses or wedding fits they ordered from the designer).

Imagine trying to be a good sport about doing the Cha Cha Slide in a wedding dress you saw for the first time 24 hours ago, but instead, you have to deactivate all of your social media because hundreds of strangers decided you were public enemy number one overnight. Let this be a lesson to the internet: maybe do a tiny bit of fact-checking before turning Google Reviews into a battleground.

Marissa Dow
MARISSA is a trending news writer at Betches. She's more than just another pop-culture-addicted-east-coaster-turned-LA-transplant...she's also an upcoming television writer and aspiring Real Housewife (whichever comes first). Live, laugh, balegdah.