When my stepsister asked me to make six custom bridesmaid dresses, I said yes—hoping it might help us bond. I spent $400 from our baby fund on the materials. But when I delivered them, she called it my “gift” and laughed when I asked to be paid. In the end, karma arrived right on time.
The call came on a Tuesday morning while I was balancing my four-month-old son Max on my hip.
“Amelia? It’s Jade. I desperately need your help.”
I shifted Max to my other arm, wincing as he tugged on my hair. “What’s going on?”
“You know I’m getting married next month, right? Well, I’m having a nightmare finding bridesmaid dresses. I’ve been to 12 boutiques and nothing looks right on all six girls—different body types, you know? Then I remembered how incredible you are with that sewing machine. Your work looks totally professional.”
“Jade, I’m not really—”
“Could you make them? Please? I’ll pay you well, of course. You’d be saving my wedding. I’m out of options.”
Jade and I had never been especially close—we have different mothers and very different lives—but she was still family, sort of.
“I haven’t done any professional sewing since Max was born. How much time would I have?”
“Three weeks? I know it’s tight, but you’re so talented. Remember the dress you made for cousin Lia’s graduation? Everyone wanted to know who designed it.”
I glanced down at Max chewing my shirt collar. Our baby fund was running low. My husband Rio was working double shifts at the factory, but the bills weren’t slowing down. Maybe this could help.
“What’s your budget for materials and labor? Six custom dresses is a big project.”
“Oh, don’t worry about that now. We’ll settle the money part once they’re finished. I promise I’ll pay you.”
“Alright. I’ll do it.”
The first bridesmaid, Sarah, arrived Thursday. She was tall, curvy, and very opinionated.
“I hate high necklines,” she announced, pointing at my sketch. “Makes me look like a nun. Can we go much lower?”
“Sure,” I said, adjusting the design.
“Perfect. And I want the waist really fitted—take it in here and here.”
On Friday, petite Emma came in with the exact opposite preferences.
“This neckline is way too low,” she said. “I want it higher, the waist looser, and longer sleeves. I hate my arms.”
Saturday brought Jessica, athletic and assertive.
“I need a high slit up the thigh so I can dance. And the bust needs more structure—support is non-negotiable.”
Every fitting was a new challenge. Sarah wanted looser hips, Emma hated the dress color, Jessica complained the silk felt cheap. I agreed to all changes, no matter how contradictory.
All the while, Max cried every two hours. I nursed him while pinning hems, hunched over my machine until 3 a.m. Rio often found me asleep at the kitchen table surrounded by fabric scraps.
“You’re killing yourself over this,” he said one night, setting coffee beside me. “And you spent $400 of our baby money on materials.”
He wasn’t wrong. I’d bought high-quality silk, lining, lace, and other notions—still waiting for Jade’s reimbursement.
Two days before the wedding, I delivered six flawless, custom-fitted gowns. Jade was lounging on her couch, scrolling her phone when I arrived.
“Just hang them in the spare room,” she said without looking up.
“Don’t you want to see them? They turned out beautifully.”
“I’m sure they’re… adequate.”
Three weeks of work, $400 gone, sleepless nights—and she called them “adequate.”
“So, about the payment—”
She looked genuinely puzzled. “Payment? Oh, honey, this is obviously your wedding gift to me! What else were you going to give me? A picture frame? A blender?”
“Jade, I used money set aside for Max’s winter clothes—”
“Don’t be dramatic. It’s not like you have a real job right now. I basically gave you a fun project.”
The words stung. I left and cried in my car for half an hour before going home. Rio wanted to confront her, but I told him not to—it would only cause more drama before her big day.
The wedding was stunning. Jade looked radiant in her designer gown, but the bridesmaid dresses drew more attention than she did. I overheard guests praising their fit and design.
I also overheard Jade bragging to a friend, “The dresses were basically free labor. My stepsister’s desperate for something to do since she’s stuck at home with the baby. Some people are just easy to manipulate.”
I burned with anger.
Then, 20 minutes before her first dance, Jade rushed to my table, panic-stricken.
“My dress ripped—down the entire back seam! Everyone will see my underwear! You have to fix it!”
The irony hit me instantly—cheap construction beneath an expensive label.
I took out my emergency sewing kit and repaired it right there on the bathroom floor. When it was perfect again, she started to leave, but I stopped her.
“You owe me one truth. Tell people I made those bridesmaid dresses. Tell them what happened.”
She didn’t answer. I assumed that was the end of it—until her speech.
“I need to apologize,” Jade said into the microphone. “I promised to pay my stepsister for six custom bridesmaid dresses and then told her it was her gift to me. I used her baby’s clothing fund for materials and acted like she should be grateful. Tonight, when my dress ripped, she saved me anyway. She didn’t deserve my selfishness. This is her payment—plus extra for her baby.”
She handed me an envelope as the room erupted in applause.
It wasn’t just about the money. It was about finally being seen for my work, my effort, and my worth. Sometimes, karma arrives quietly—with a needle, thread, and a moment that forces someone to open their eyes.