Aug 16, 2011 20:01 GMT  ·  By
Replica of Bella Swan’s wedding dress in “Breaking Dawn Part 1” goes on sale in November 2011
   Replica of Bella Swan’s wedding dress in “Breaking Dawn Part 1” goes on sale in November 2011

Female Twi-hards with plans to tie the knot at the end of the year or in 2012, get ready: a replica of the dress Bella Swan (played by Kristen Stewart) will wear on her big day, when she becomes Mrs. Edward Cullen, will go on sale shortly after the film release.

Even though many details from the upcoming installment in “The Twilight Saga,” “Breaking Dawn Part 1,” have been revealed in the past couple of months, the wedding dress is one of the best kept secrets.

Fans know that Carolina Herrera designed it but, beyond that, everything else is a matter of speculating.

At the same time, Robert Pattinson (vampire Edward in the films) has done his fair share of teasing the fans, promising them a superb wedding, where Bella will be at her most beautiful so far.

No wonder then that anticipation is high for the film to come out. Banking on it is the announcement that a replica of the dress will become available as early as November, the Daily Mail reports.

“Alfred Angelo will be exclusively selling the official replica in his Signature stores in the US and independent retailers worldwide from November,” the tab writes.

In other words, women from all over the world will be able to replicate Bella’s look on their very own big day – what better way to prove they’re true Twi-hards than this.

“Pricing has not yet been revealed but typical dresses range anywhere from £300 to £3,000. The designer recently created a copy of Kate Middleton’s Alexander McQueen gown and last month unveiled a collection inspired by Disney characters,” the Mail further notes.

So, make sure you organize your wedding budget accordingly.

Speaking about the much talked about wedding gown just recently, author Stephenie Meyer revealed that it wouldn’t be as heavy as original Edwardian creations, but rather an “old-fashioned Art Nouveau-style” one.

“It’s a simpler style than the frillier Edwardian stuff. Elegant white satin, cut on the bias, with long sleeves,” was how Meyer described the dress.