Royal wedding
Another 'sample rewrite' that seemed worth saving: an exercise in trying to pull out the essential from amid a mass of detail to create the desired atmosphere.
"At long last the bride came into view. The roses in her cheeks echoed those in the bouquet she held pressed to her breast, and the smile in her eyes matched that of the husband who awaited her. She came down the aisle as if the creamy sweep of her skirt weighed nothing at all, and her small head, held high, was crowned with a tiara like the gold at the heart of a crocus."
The talented chapel choir above the pews starts to sing a Nordic hymn as the entrance opened, and at last, the royal strawberry-blonde bride appeared in the mirror's view. She was grinning with twinkled, peacock eyes and rosy cheeks towards her smiling husband-to-be while walking towards the altar, holding an elaborate bouquet of colorful flowers with her dainty hands while her long veil trailed after her on the crimson carpeted aisle.
Her vivid wedding ballgown, which comprises a milky close-fitting off-shoulder bodice with flowered shoulder drapes around her bare, freckled shoulders, sweetheart neckline, and a full bell-shaped plain skirt, was certainly eye-catching, reflecting the cheery atmosphere of the chapel. And the golden tiara atop her round head that resembles the crocus of Arendelle made her look shinier.
"At long last the bride came into view. The roses in her cheeks echoed those in the bouquet she held pressed to her breast, and the smile in her eyes matched that of the husband who awaited her. She came down the aisle as if the creamy sweep of her skirt weighed nothing at all, and her small head, held high, was crowned with a tiara like the gold at the heart of a crocus."
no subject
The style of your rewrite reminded me of Wilde's fairy tales a bit.
no subject
Perhaps because those epithets were simply not part of my experience growing up; you wouldn't walk along the street and think 'there goes a strawberry-blonde girl', although you might look over a fence and see a strawberry roan mare:
The "sweetheart neckline" is a definite anachronism, which I think comes from looking for the perfect word to define the details of a specific costume sketch, without being familiar enough with English to be aware which bits of dress jargon are appropriate for the era and which (most of them!) are modern innovations. (See also 'messy up-do' used by fanfiction writers to describe a 19th-century hairstyle, apparently unaware that hair was assumed to be put up by default -- well, apart from a brief fashion for cropped hair in women thanks to the French Revolution!)