In Cinderella's transformation scene, the Fairy Godmother turns her pink rags into a magical dress using her magic. Her pixie dust is clearly a sparkly silver color. Furthermore, it would make sense for Cinderella's dress to also be this silvery color since her dress still glimmers with the pixie dust.
One of the most distinctive parts of the Cinderella story is her magical transformation from a poor servant girl into a beautiful princess with the help of her Fairy Godmother. A key part of this transformation is Cinderella's iconic ball gown, which is famously known for being a sparkling blue in the popular 1950 Disney animated film. The Fairy Godmother is a very powerful fairy, she has been seen performing several magical spells, such as transforming objects and animals, turning Cinderella's tattered dress into a beautiful blue dress, her mice into white horses and a pumpkin into a beautiful chariot.
Along comes the Fairy Godmother, and Cindy gets her Dress-with-a-capital-D. One thing that's interesting about this dress is that contrary to most of the reproductions, including the official Disneyland/Disney World repros, Cinderella's dress is white or white and silver, not blue. This dress is a mishmash of possible eras.
Cinderella, the iconic fairytale princess, is known for her breathtakingly beautiful ball gown. But have you ever noticed that in many adaptations, they seem to get her dress color wrong? From the classic Disney animation to live-action remakes, the color of Cinderella's iconic gown seems to constantly be a topic of debate. With all due respect, When you call Disney, the CMs often can't even tell you what time the buses start running with any accuracy.
I wouldn't trust them as a believable source. For what it's worth, the fairy godmother mentions that she's making the dress the same color as Cinderella's eyes, which are definitely blue, not white. When her Fairy Godmother shows up to grant her wish of going to the ball, Cinderella's outfit turns into an all-white flapper dress, reminiscent of the 1920s.
Answer: Dress and shoes With a flick of her wand and the song "Bibbidi-bobbidi-boo", Cinderella's fairy godmother changed a pumpkin into a carriage, mice into horses, and a horse into a footman. For a dress, the fairy godmother used magic to fix Cinderella's ruined pink dress into a blue and white ball gown. For an added touch, Cinderella was given glass slippers.
It looks blue when she is dancing with the prince because of the lighting. If you watch the movie, when the Fairy Godmother gives Cinderella the dress it is clearly white. The color was made an even deeper blue recently, when the princesses were redesigned.
However, in the original film, her dress is a dove gray color (which was a very popular color for apparel in the 1950s) with white accents. This screenshot from the Blu-ray edition shows it in direct contrast with the Fairy Godmother's blue robes.