Family April 15, 2018

Blind bride details how 'extremely difficult' it is planning her 'fairy tale' wedding

James Day - Wedding Photographer
Blind bride Stephanie Agnew tries on wedding dresses in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

A blind bride is planning her wedding despite how "extremely difficult" it's been without being able to see, among other things, her wedding gown.

Stephanie Agnew became engaged to Robert Campbell last Christmas when he dropped down on one knee in front of family. The South Melbourne, Australian, couple has spent the past year busily planning their fall wedding.

Photographer James Day, who met Agnew, 31, when the two were in high school, has been documenting her wedding planning in hopes to "raise awareness about vision loss," the bride told ABC News.

James Day - Wedding Photographer
Blind bride Stephanie Agnew with her brother Cal at Luv Bridal in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Agnew was 19 years old when she was diagnosed with cone-rod retinal dystrophy, which causes deterioration of the retina and gradually leads to blindness. The bride was familiar with the genetic condition because her mother and two brothers have the same condition.

Bride's proud display of her 4-inch birthmark at wedding goes viral Special glasses let legally blind man see wife walk down the aisle

The former real estate agent told ABC News that "having no vision can be extremely difficult but I do not let it stop me it just means I have to find different ways of doing things."

James Day - Wedding Photographer
Blind bride Stephanie Agnew tries on wedding dresses at a bridal shop in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

"It is extremely difficult trying to plan a wedding when you are blind," Agnew continued. "The majority of images online have no descriptions and everything is extremely visual. Forget trying to find inspiration on Pinterest or Instagram!

"I have to rely on the people around me to find things that I say I like and try to understand my vision for the day and pick things that they know I would like even if they don’t," she added. "I have a vision in my head of what I want but without having images it is extremely hard to describe this to others."

I thought I would get upset because I couldn’t see what I look like, but I enjoyed the experience overall.

Agnew recently tried on wedding dresses at Luv Bridal in Australia with her family, bridesmaids and her brother Cal, who doesn't have cone-rod retinal dystrophy. She had to rely heavily on her family and attendants describing what her fingers were touching.

Day wrote in a blog post about the couple that Agnew regrets not trying on wedding dresses while she still had her vision. Right now, she can only see shadows and shapes, and also relies on a seeing-eye dog to navigate her world.

Agnew said she was initially "hesitant" to try on wedding dresses without seeing them.

James Day - Wedding Photographer
Blind bride Stephanie Agnew's mother, who's also blind, goes with her to try on wedding dresses in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

"I thought I would get upset because I couldn’t see what I look like, but I enjoyed the experience overall," she admitted.

For Agnew, planning her wedding -- the big day is in November! -- means relying on others to interpret her vision. But she's still excited to wed 48-year-old Campbell.

She told ABC News she's most looking forward to "getting the fairy tale that I always wanted despite the fact that I am blind."