That gown you found? Gorgeous. The color, the fit, the way it makes you feel like Louisiana royalty – absolutely perfect. But here's what separates "pretty dress" from "she just walked in and everyone noticed": the accessories.
Mardi Gras balls are one of the few occasions left where going all-out is actually the point. Nobody's judging you for being extra. They're judging you for being boring. So let's talk about how to make your accessories work as hard as that dress.
Most women pick their dress, then their shoes, then scramble for jewelry the night before. Flip that. Your earrings frame your face in every photo, every conversation, every moment someone looks at you while you're talking.
For Mardi Gras balls specifically, this is your permission slip to go bold. We're talking statement chandeliers, dramatic drops, or clusters that catch the light from across the ballroom. The venue lighting at these events – whether you're at the Cajundome or a krewe hall – tends to be low and warm, which means sparkle actually shows up instead of washing out.
A few things to consider: If your dress has a high neckline or major shoulder detail, your earrings are doing most of the accessory work. Go bigger than you think you should. If your dress is strapless or has a simple neckline, you've got more flexibility to balance earrings with a necklace.
Gold tones play beautifully with traditional Mardi Gras purple and green. Silver and crystal work better with cooler jewel tones or if you're going full glam with a black gown.
Here's what you're carrying to a Mardi Gras ball: phone, lipstick, ID, maybe a credit card, possibly tissues because you will sweat (it's Louisiana, even in February). That's it. You don't need a bag that holds your entire life.
But you also don't need a clutch so tiny it's basically decorative. There's a sweet spot – something structured enough to sit on a table without flopping over, big enough for the essentials, and interesting enough to be part of your look.
Beaded clutches are having a major moment right now, and they're perfect for ball season. The texture photographs beautifully, they come in every color imaginable, and they add visual interest without competing with your dress. A purple and gold beaded clutch with a green gown? Chef's kiss.
If beading isn't your thing, look for interesting hardware, unique shapes, or unexpected materials. Velvet reads incredibly luxe for winter balls. Metallic leather catches light without being too flashy.
Real talk: depending on your dress length, your shoes might be completely invisible. But your feet will know they exist for every single one of those five hours.
Block heels and platform styles give you height without the wobble. This matters when you're walking on ballroom floors that might be slick, standing for photos on uneven outdoor areas, and dancing after a few glasses of champagne.
If you're committed to a stiletto, bring backup flats in your car. Not as a defeat – as a strategy. Dance the last hour in comfort while everyone else is limping.
Color-wise, you've got two good options: match your dress for a seamless leg-lengthening effect, or go metallic (gold or silver) which works with literally everything and you'll wear again.
A bare wrist with a formal gown can look unfinished, but nobody wants to sound like a wind chime every time they reach for their drink.
The solution is strategic stacking. Mix one or two bangles with a cuff – the cuff stays put and anchors everything. Or go with a single dramatic cuff that makes a statement on its own. Tennis bracelets are classic for balls, and layering two different widths looks intentional rather than accidental.
Skip anything that might catch on delicate fabric. Those gorgeous chain-link styles? Save them for date night. Ball gowns and snag-prone jewelry are not friends.
This one's optional, but worth mentioning: hair accessories at formal events are back in a big way. We're not talking prom tiaras (unless you're actually royalty in your krewe, in which case, crown yourself).
Think jeweled bobby pins clustered behind one ear, a subtle crystal comb peeking out of an updo, or a velvet headband that matches your clutch. These photograph beautifully and give your look a finished, editorial quality.
If your dress is already heavily embellished, skip this. If your dress is simpler, a hair accessory can be the unexpected detail that elevates everything.
Your accessories should feel connected without matching exactly. Pick a metal family (warm golds and rose golds together, or cool silvers and crystals together) and stick with it. Pull one color from your dress into at least one accessory. Let one piece be the star – usually earrings or a statement clutch – and let everything else support it.
The goal isn't to look like you bought a matching set. The goal is to look like a woman who knows exactly what she's doing.
Mardi Gras ball season is short, sis. Make every photo count.
Clothing Boutique
We're a chic and sophisticated and warm and inviting and trendy and modern and feminine and romantic and effortlessly comfortable and fun and playful...
Youngsville, Louisiana
View full profile