Prom Dress Stores Rockland County

Welcome to The Henry's Bridal.  Inside our doors, you'll find large scale selection and expertise delivered with one-on-one attention in a relaxed atmosphere. Brides and grooms along with their attendants and parents will receive detailed assistance from our experienced bridal consultants. We will listen to your wants and needs and evaluate the style and design elements you desire. Welcome To The Henry's Bridal BoutiqueMaine's Premier Bridal Boutique & Formal Wear Shop Inside our doors, you'll find large scale selection and expertise delivered with one-on-one attention in a relaxed atmosphere. A Henry’s Bride may try on as many gowns as she wishes during her quest to find her dream gown. Our boutique has hundreds of gowns to fit brides and budgets of all sizes. Special orders can be made if you have your heart set on something not in our stock or if you need another size or color. No stone will go unturned until you are standing in front of our mirror in the wedding gown of your dreams. 
Appointments are not necessary. You and yours are invited to visit The Henry’s at your convenience during our normal hours of operation. By shopping locally, there are even more benefits for you, the customer. Why spend your valuable time and money traveling to Portland or Boston when the selection of gowns, whether it be bridal, bridesmaid, mothers or prom, is just as plentiful right here in your own backyard. T Shirt Bio ViergeAdditionally, your business helps keep the surrounding areas economy healthy. Snow Tires For Dodge CaliberAll of our staff live locally, and we support many local organizations and charities through donations made possible by your patronage.Hot Tub Rash Vs HerpesEvery spring, thousands of students across the country celebrate a rite of passage:
Established in 2005, Operation PROM provides resources, opportunity and mentoring to students in need. Services are available to children in financial need, those who are homeless, sick, or disabled. School supplies and scholarships are available in addition to our regular donations of Prom dresses and tuxedos. Operation PROM was originally established to help low-income students attend their Proms by providing free Prom dresses and tuxedo rentals. It has since expanded to include regular donations of clothing and school supplies to students who are sick, homeless or live in shelters and do not have family to assist them. To date, Operation PROM has helped thousands of students across the U.S. attend their Prom at little or no cost. To request a free Prom dress or tuxedo, students must be recommended by their guidance counselor and meet the requirements such as a severe financial need, and the student should be passing all of their classes. Our goal is to continue to expand throughout U.S. and increase the number of donations each year.
Operation PROM is partnered with several community organizations, including departments of Social Services, churches, and hospitals. Please consider a monetarydonation to Operation PROM.please bear with us we're currently making our site more stylish.please check back soon. Free prom dresses to be distributed in Westchester for girls in need 'Operation Prom' to visit county center on April 29, 30 Embed code of this video: For the first time, Macy’s department store is on board with “Operation Prom” – which provides free dresses to girls whose parents can’t afford to buy them one. Macy’s will donate dresses to the organization which will be given out at the Westchester County Center in White Plains at the end of this month. Elidia Loci, who attended Roosevelt High School in Yonkers, got her senior prom dress through the organization two years ago. She recalled how excited she was to pick out a gown at the county center, and how she tried it on over and over at home that afternoon.
Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino says a lot of parents can’t afford a $1,000 night, but this is one way they can. The county is providing free storage for the dresses at the Westchester County Airport. The two-day dress giveaway event will be held April 29 and 30. View Complete TV ListingsNew England Trwy S|BELFAST — Soon, an empty storefront in the Reny’s Plaza will see a whirlwind of activity as teenage girls search for the perfect prom dress — and then take it home for free. The Cinderella Project of Maine, now in its sixth year, is bigger than ever, according to organizer Jessica Woods. Last year, the nonprofit gave 140 new and gently used dresses away to girls who needed one. This year, organizers are aiming to give an even larger number to young women from Waldo County, the Bangor area, Mount Desert Island and beyond this coming Saturday. Dresses have been donated from fairy godmothers’ closets throughout Waldo County and also further afield, Woods said, with dress drop-off spots at Hannaford stores in Bangor, at Bangor Savings Bank locations around Waldo County and in Camden and Rockland, and at Belfast Area High School.
“We never want a girl to leave without a dress,” Woods said. In exchange for the dresses, the girls are asked to “pay it forward,” by doing a good deed for someone else. “It’s a recycling project. For years and years, probably generations, girls have swapped dresses,” Woods said. “We feel really good about being able to do the Cinderella Project, because it makes us feel great. We just try to remind them that they could pay it forward.” Waldo Community Action Partners once again are sponsoring the project, and Reny’s is donating the display space in the plaza for the second year in a row, Woods said. And with prom season fast approaching, the interest in the Cinderella Project is growing, she said. Last week, a group of girls from Belfast Area High School helped move 3,400 prom dresses in a couple of hours, as the former Waltz Pharmacy space filled up with racks of dresses in a rainbow of colors, and there’s “lots of chatter” on the group’s Facebook page, according to Woods.
Students at Unity College and St. Joseph’s College in Standish just completed dress drives, said organizer Mandie Sawyer of Belfast. “It’s a big project,” Woods said. Girls who attend the event can expect to find more than the array of prom dresses. Other items will include shoes and accessories such as jewelry, she said, and the project also will accept donated dresses during the event. Some of those may not make their debut until next year’s Cinderella Project if they need cleaning or other TLC. Organizers are always looking for plus-sized dresses, Woods said, with a full rack this year of sizes 16 and up. “We just love the Cinderella Project, and we’re very proud of it, and we want it to keep going,” she said. The 2011 Cinderella Project dress giveaway will be held from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 9, in the former Waltz Pharmacy in the Reny’s Plaza in Belfast. There is no cost for any of the dresses, jewelry or accessories. Dressing rooms will be available to try on gowns and BAHS and other community volunteers will be on hand to assist with the selection process.