Wedding stress can make people do questionable things, but this bride’s request crossed a line. She asked her bridesmaid, Tara, to take off her glasses for photos because they “made her eyes look weird.” Tara explained she literally can’t see without them, yet the bride insisted it was “just for the pictures.”
The internet didn’t hold back. Commenters called her out for valuing vanity over empathy, reminding her that glasses aren’t an accessory, they’re a necessity. “You want perfect pictures? Hire models,” one person wrote. Lesson learned: if your definition of beauty excludes your friends as they are, the problem isn’t the glasses.
A bride asked her visually impaired bridesmaid to remove her thick glasses for wedding photos to look “breathtakingly beautiful”














This viral post struck a nerve because it highlights a deeper societal issue: how we define “beauty” and how it often excludes people with visible aids like glasses, hearing devices, or mobility tools.
Dr. Louise Laverty, a clinical psychologist specializing in self-image, notes that “Weddings tend to magnify social perfectionism, brides often internalize the idea that the day must be flawless, which leads to hyper-controlling behavior over appearances.”
In this case, the bride’s fixation on aesthetic harmony crossed into ableism, judging someone’s appearance through the lens of disability stigma.
According to a 2023 Journal of Social Inclusion study, over 70% of individuals with visible assistive devices (like glasses, canes, or braces) report being told at least once to “take it off for the photo.” The study found that these comments, though often well-intentioned, reinforce harmful messages that people are only “presentable” when they hide their disability.
Optometrist and disability advocate Dr. Hina Patel told The Guardian, “For some, glasses are as essential as a wheelchair or prosthetic limb. Asking someone to remove them for an image isn’t just impractical, it’s deeply invalidating.”
The irony is that authentic photographs are far better than forced perfection. Wedding photographers often advise keeping everyone comfortable and natural. “If a person feels self-conscious, it shows,” says photographer Emma Reese of Vogue Weddings. “True beauty isn’t symmetry, it’s sincerity.”
So, what should the bride have done? Communicated care, not control. Instead of focusing on how Tara’s glasses looked, she could have ensured her bridesmaids felt confident and appreciated. The most memorable wedding photos aren’t flawless, they’re honest.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Reddit users slammed the bride as a jerk, calling her request shallow and bridezilla-level, comparing it to asking a wheelchair user to stand for photos













This group criticized her fixation on Tara’s looks, urging her to apologize for prioritizing photos over comfort









Glasses-wearers stressed the cruelty of asking Tara to go blind, noting squinting would ruin photos more




These folks highlighted the ableism, warning Tara’s hurt could end her role in the wedding






In her pursuit of perfect wedding photos, this bride forgot the point of having bridesmaids at all to stand beside the people who’ve seen her at her worst and loved her anyway. Tara’s glasses don’t ruin photos; they tell her story.
The internet made it clear: love, not lenses, should define a friendship. And if you can’t see the beauty in someone as they are, maybe the vision problem isn’t theirs.







