Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings by Alfred Angelo, a partnership between Disney and bridal company Alfred Angelo, serves the devoted Disney princess fan, offering brides a convenient way to order up the look of their dreams. Want to be Snow White? There’s literally a dress for that, and it will only set you back $1,499 (Dhs5,506) — affordable by wedding dress standards. Or, if your Pinterest fantasy is to be wearing a mermaid dress standing on some rocks by the ocean, you can have that too. 

On Thursday, during New York Bridal Week, Alfred Angelo presented the 2017 Disney Fairy Tale Weddings bridal collection and along with the standbys — Aurora, Tiana, Belle, Elsa, etc. — introduced two new looks: Pocahontas and Mulan. 

Bill Pesce, the head designer at Alfred Angelo, said in a statement that “We are excited to have two powerful and brave heroines serve as an additional source of inspiration for the Disney Fairy Tale Weddings collection this year. Their independent spirits, diverse story-telling and strong personalities are characteristics that modern brides can relate to.”

“Powerful.” “Brave.” “Independent.” “Diverse.” “Strong.” OK — I see you, Disney and Alfred Angelo. Hitting all the buzzwords. Now let’s see the dresses!

Here’s the Pocahontas look to start:

You can see the reference to Pocahontas’s “signature one-shoulder neckline” which was created with draped tulle for the wedding dress. The look combines “tradition and modernity,” according to Alfred Angelo.

Now for the Mulan dress, which was “styled after the brave and strong Disney Princess Mulan,” features a “mandarin collar” and was pictured like this for an ad:

To be fair, the dress itself is stunning. The lace is beautiful and the train is dramatic yet delicate at the same time. But there’s something really wrong with it. It’s subtle, but it’s there.

So a few questions for Disney, Alfred Angelo, and designer Bill Pesce (who could not be reached for comment):

What possessed you to design a “Mulan” gown in the style of a dress, the qipao, that became popularised among Chinese women in the 1920s? Did you think, Chinese people! What do they wear? Oh yeah, mandarin collars!? Did you not consider the fact that the legend of the warrior Mulan was first transcribed in the sixth century, more than a thousand years before the mandarin collar became fashionable among Shanghainese women? Or that animated movie Mulan doesn’t even wear anything close to the design of the wedding dress and instead wears hanfu?

Why is the model holding an oil-paper umbrella, which Mulan does in fact hold in the movie … in the one scene where she feels least like herself and after which she wipes off her whole face with humiliated tears?

Come on, Disney and Alfred Angelo. I know it’s just a princess dress, and the wedding industrial complex has a lot of other issues to deal with, but stereotypes and tokenism aren’t getting us anywhere. Is it a lot to keep track of? Maybe. But that’s the least your brides deserve.

Originally appeared on Cosmopolitan.com