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White Lace X Cross Slip Midi Dress
100% Cotton
$49.00 USD
Yellow Sweetheart Neck Floral Slip Midi Dress
$41.00 USD
Red Sweetheart Neck Satin Midi Dress
$51.00 USD
Blaues Satin-Halterkleid in Midi-Länge
$35.00 USD
Grünes Velours-Midikleid in A-Linie
$45.00 USD
Grünes, geblümtes Maxikleid in A-Linie mit eckigem Ausschnitt
$47.00 USD

Dinner dresses in midi and maxi lengths — jacquard, satin, chiffon, and floral print. This is one of the larger collections (~70 pieces across 3 pages), so the filters up top help. Nothing in here is mini length. Most are $39–$53.

Picking a dinner dress by where you're going

The word "dinner" covers a lot of ground — there's a big gap between a casual pasta place and a rooftop tasting menu. This collection skews dressy, so if your dinner is genuinely casual, you might be overdressed in most of what's here. For more casual options, the brunch dresses tend to fit relaxed restaurants better.

For a nice restaurant or a date: the satin midis are the most versatile choice. The wine red and grey-green cowl-sleeve midis have enough detail to look intentional without being over the top. Pair with heels or even clean ankle boots and you're set. The satin A-line midis in apricot and green are softer — more "let's get Italian somewhere with candles."

For a special occasion dinner — birthday, anniversary, holiday: the jacquard maxis are the dressiest pieces here. The texture reads more expensive than regular polyester, and it photographs well in restaurant lighting. The blue and green jacquard slip maxis (9 and 13 reviews respectively) are the most popular. The apricot jacquard corset version has more shape at the waist if you want something more defined.

For an outdoor dinner or patio: the chiffon options move well in evening breezes. The black sweetheart neck chiffon maxi (16 reviews) works for both dinner and events after. The floral midis — especially the purple ruffle tie-strap (34 reviews, the bestseller in this collection) — are lighter and more comfortable in warm weather.

What's actually in 70+ dresses

This collection runs deep, so here's a breakdown by fabric:

Jacquard — woven texture, no print. These are the most structured and "elevated" dresses here. Colors: green, blue, red, black, apricot. All maxi length. Good for anything you'd call an occasion.

Satin — smooth, reflective, solid colors. Wine red, grey-green, apricot, off-white, yellow. Mix of midi and maxi. The one-shoulder maxis (wine red, dark green, navy, apricot) are the most dramatic pieces in the collection — they need heels to work properly.

Floral print — polyester, lighter weight, mostly tie-strap or ruffle details. The floral dresses overlap with this collection if you want to browse just the prints.

Chiffon — lightest fabric here. Moves a lot, best for warm weather dinners. Black, wine red, green. The black ones work for evening; the colored ones lean more daytime.

Polka dot — two pieces, both black-based. The mandarin collar midi (10 reviews) is the more unusual one — it reads vintage and works for themed dinners or quirky date spots.

Dinner vs. cocktail vs. formal — where does this collection sit?

This collection sits between casual and cocktail. Most pieces here are appropriate for a nice dinner but would be slightly underdressed for a black-tie event. If you need something more formal, the formal dresses have more structured options. If you need something more relaxed, try the date night dresses — there's some overlap, but that collection includes minis and more going-out styles.

What length is best for a dinner dress?

It depends on the restaurant. Midi (below the knee) is the safest — it works in almost any setting, from a nice Italian place to a hotel restaurant. Maxi works for formal dinners and special occasions but can feel like a lot for a casual weeknight dinner. This collection doesn't have minis, so if that's what you want, check the date night or cocktail collections instead.

Can I wear a satin dress to a casual dinner?

You can, but you'll probably be the most dressed-up person there. Satin catches light and reads "special occasion" to most people. If the dinner is casual but you want satin anyway, go with a midi length and flat sandals instead of heels — that tones it down. The cowl-sleeve midis in this collection are the least formal satin options here.

What's the difference between the jacquard dresses and the satin ones?

Texture vs. sheen. Jacquard has a woven pattern built into the fabric — it looks textured and dimensional, especially in person. Satin is smooth and reflective — it catches light. Jacquard reads more "structured and interesting," satin reads more "classic and dressy." For a dinner where you'll mostly be sitting, satin drapes better across the lap. For a dinner where you'll be standing and mingling, jacquard holds its shape better.