How do you mix and match green bridesmaid dresses?
Green mix-and-match works when you stay within one undertone: earthy yellow-greens (Sage, Olive Green, Vineyard Green, Willow) blend naturally together, while cool teal-greens (Seagrass, Jade, Peacock Teal) form their own family. Crossing tracks — a sage next to a jade — reads muddy, not curated.
Earthy Greens: Sage to Evergreen
Sage is the softest anchor in the palette — a muted, gray-inflected green that reads as nearly neutral in photos. Willow Green is similar but slightly lighter and cooler. From there, the palette deepens through Vineyard Green to Olive Green (warm, almost khaki) and on to Hunter Green and Evergreen, which photograph almost as dark as black against candlelight. This track suits garden weddings, fall ceremonies, and any venue with warm neutrals and wood tones.
Cool Greens: Seagrass to Peacock Teal
Seagrass sits in the middle of the cool track — blue-influenced and fresh, with a slightly muted quality that makes it pair cleanly with soft blues and grays. Jade and Peacock Teal are bolder, with an aquatic vibrancy that suits outdoor summer ceremonies and beach venues. A graduation from Seagrass to Jade to Peacock Teal across a bridal party is dramatic and cohesive; mixing any of these with Sage or Olive Green is not.
How to Structure the Mix
The most reliable approach in green: pick two or three shades from the same track and assign them light-to-dark by silhouette type or party role. A wrap in Sage, a one-shoulder in Vineyard, and a strapless in Evergreen tells a clear visual story. When in doubt, stay within the earthy track — it has more depth and more catalog options than the teal track.
Order swatches before finalizing — it's the best way to see how each shade and fabric looks in person before you commit.
