Why there is no price tag
A couture gown has no shelf price because it does not yet exist when you commission it. There is no garment to mark up — only a design to be drawn for you, a pattern to be drafted from your measurements, fabric to be sourced for your frame and your evening, and many hours of construction and fitting ahead. Two gowns that look similar on a hanger can sit a world apart in hours, materials and hand-finishing. That is why a serious house quotes privately, after it understands the piece.
At HANIYE, the figure is agreed before any work begins, in writing, so there are no surprises. What follows is what moves that figure up or down.
What actually drives the price
- Fabric. The single biggest variable. A fluid crepe and a hand-beaded tulle from a European mill are not the same line on an invoice. Rare or limited cloth, and the quantity a design needs, set the floor.
- Hand-work. Embroidery, beading, appliqué and pleating are measured in hours, sometimes hundreds of them. The more the hand does, the higher the figure.
- Structure. A built corsetry foundation, boning, internal support and a gown that holds its architecture without help from the wearer all take skilled time.
- Fittings. Each private fitting is craftsmanship, not admin. A precise fit is built across several sessions, and that time is part of the work.
- Timeline. A comfortable schedule is normal; a compressed one, made to meet a near date, asks the atelier to reorder its work and is reflected accordingly.
You are not paying for cloth and thread. You are paying for hours, judgement and the certainty that no one else will wear your dress.
What the investment buys
Beyond the gown itself, a commission buys exclusivity — a one-of-one design, numbered in the House Register and then retired, so it never appears on anyone else. It buys a fit drafted to your body rather than corrected at the till, and an interior finished as carefully as the outside. And it buys discretion: a private atelier, one client at a time, your evening treated as the only one that matters.
Many clients find the more useful comparison is not against a boutique gown but against the cost-per-wear of something made to last and to be re-worn, altered, or kept.
How to get an accurate figure
The fastest route to a real number is a short conversation about the piece: the occasion, the date, the level of hand-work you imagine, and any fabric direction. With that, the atelier can give you a considered range rather than a guess, and a firm quotation once the design is agreed.
You can begin that conversation on WhatsApp or by reading how a commission unfolds on The Couture Process.



