Showing posts with label Indian Wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Wedding. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Wedding Bouquet: The Floral Beauty of a Bride


When a bride makes her way towards the altar, there are basically two things people look at: The bride and The Wedding Bouquet. The bride should hold a stunning bouquet adorned with the best possible wedding bouquet flowers. The wedding bouquet flowers contribute a lot in making a bride look beautiful and elegant.

If you haven’t taken any decisions regarding your wedding bouquet flowers hitherto, Roses are a versatile option to start with. The wedding bouquet flowers should have a beautiful texture and fragrance. Roses are the most common and loved flowers in the world. They are available throughout the year in an amazing variety of attractive shapes and textures. Roses have a beautiful fragrance, hence called, The Fragrance  Of Love. Moreover, roses symbolize love. You can make a classic look with a hand-tied bouquet using blooms of one type and colour. Adding a subtle touch of foliage,bind the stems with gorgeous ribbons to have a simple yet elegant design of your wedding bouquet.

The quality and design of the wedding bouquet flowers should be eye-catching. The extreme hot pink and gorgeous trails of vivid orchids bound with grass and beading are very popular and add on to the visual height and slenderness of the bride. The wedding bouquet flowers comprising of soft pinks and creams will help you get rid of that rigged contrived look. Illusion roses mixed with herbs and pale cream roses also make a bride look thin and tall.

For the brides who are ready to take risk and stand out of league, a girlie pink floral bag with beautiful soft pink colored flowers in it would make for a stunning wedding bouquet. The pink colored wedding bouquet flowers in this handbag can be mixed with fine white or cream pearls to give a graceful and soft look. Also available is a gorgeous bridal pomander with the introduction of peonies for those who are not afraid to be different.

Cindy Kirkland of creative works recommends using David Austin roses as the wedding bouquet flowers. English cut roses are also a good option. Their unique shape and papery texture of the petals adds on a new dimension to a classic posy.

While deciding the wedding bouquet flowers, the pinks, oranges and yellows should be kept at the top of the list. These colours are vibrant and add a cheerful taste to the wedding bouquet. Lilacs, garden roses, protea, hydrangeas, lisiantus, anthurium, celosia carnations, chrysanthemums, etc. are other options that you might check for your wedding bouquet flowers.

Therefore, wedding bouquet flowers should be given proper attention when it comes to dressing up a bride for the wedding day. To know more about it, please visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com

Thursday, 12 January 2012

The Most Apt Wedding Songs


An Indian wedding is so very incomplete without music and dance. The dhol, shehnai, Punjabi wedding songs and also some very popular wedding songs from Bollywood movies form the quintessential elements of an Indian Wedding.

Moreover, wedding songs also serve the purpose of perpetuating and maintaining the theme of one’s wedding to the best possible extent. Imagine a royal theme wedding with some jazz and salsa! Now, imagine a royal theme wedding with shehnai and folk dances, you must be able to comprehend the pivotal role music and dance play in one’s wedding.

Now, that you are about to approach your wedding day, here is a little piece of advice on the process of selection of your wedding songs:

Some people like to welcome their guests with musical tunes and mostly traditional instrumental music is used to welcome the guests. A melodious tune being played on a shehnai automatically sets the mood for the celebration of the big event.

Amidst all the different genres of wedding songs which can be incorporated into your wedding celebrations, love songs have been in tradition since times immemorial and still continue to enjoy its elite status. Right from Bollywood to Hollywood, you have a plethora of varieties to choose from which will stir those little butterflies in your partner’s and your stomach and will make you go crimson.

Another genre of wedding songs which form the part and parcel of an Indian wedding are tear jerkers which are songs which choke your throat and silently makes everybody reach out for their handkerchiefs. In this section, one can choose anything from folk songs to popular Bollywood numbers like the title track of Baabul (2006) sung by Amitabh Bachchan.

Dance numbers are a must in every Indian wedding as although the big event is a moment which weighs down the hearts of the bride and her parents, yet it is also a moment meant for celebration. Dance numbers can vary widely from the Punjabi dhol beats, accompanied by Punjabi wedding songs to some folk dance forms like dandiya, bhangra etc to some fine Bollywood and Hollywood mixes from some Dj.

Whatever wedding songs you select, you must keep in mind the theme of your wedding. Your wedding songs and their genres must synchronise with the theme of your wedding ceremony or else it might spoil all the extra efforts that you have been taking to make your wedding day a flawless one.


To read more about Wedding Songs, please visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Wedding Flowers: Some Creative Ideas


An Indian wedding is incomplete without wedding flowers and besides, the task of picking up your wedding flowers is indeed a difficult one and can work wonders with your wedding theme if you add some creativity to it. Wedding flowers need not necessarily be exotic, rare and costly ones. You can use simple flowers which are easily available, add a tincture of your innovation to it and create an aromatic ambience that will be remembered by people for a lifetime.

Instead of using just flowers for your wedding decor, you can make use of beads, diamante buckles, crystals, unconventional twigs, vases, feathers candles. You may add as many wedding flowers as you want to, to your wedding decor or keep it simple and less in numbers depending on the kind of ambience that you want to create on your wedding day. However, one thing which must be kept in mind is that the colour of all the wedding flowers used by you must be in synchronisation with the tones of your wedding palette.

Instead of going for the conventional arrangement of flowers in vases, you can make use of tassels of flowers, using a myriad of flowers and crystals or beads. These tassels can be hung at various heights and produce a magnificent effect on the ambience. Round ball floral arrangements can also be incorporated in your wedding decor and look quite beautiful. These round ball floral arrangements can be used in different ways, like, you can hang them or place them on top of tall vases or you can also use them for centre table arrangements.

You can also go for floral chandeliers or frames. Floral ladis are also in vogue these days. Also urlis with floating candles and aromatic flowers add weight to your wedding decor. Besides these, floral rangoli and floating floral rangoli are also hot this wedding season and add a stupendous effect to your wedding decor.

Paying little attention to little details in the arrangement of your wedding flowers will make the big difference in your wedding decor.

To read more about Wedding Flowers, please visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com

Friday, 30 December 2011

A Complete Guide on Indian Marriage


India and the orient are popularly known to the world as the land of myths and legends, fables and folklores and snake charmers and seers and this quotient of exoticism which is generally associated with India’s culture is further propagated by Indian marriages which are affairs known worldwide for their opulence and grandeur. However, an Indian marriage is something much more beyond the obvious extravagance and grandiose as they mark the unison of two souls. In fact, Indian marriages are much more ritualistic and traditional than marriages in other parts of the world. Marriages in the west are looked at more as a bond of legal and social importance whereas in India, marriages are looked at as a personal bond and are regarded with a sense of veneration and piety.

An Indian marriage is often confused with a Hindu marriage; however, it is just one of the many kids of marriages that can be grouped under an Indian marriage. Apart from Hindu marriages, Muslim, Sikh, Zoroastrian, Jewish, Buddhist, Jain and Christian marriages also fall under the category of Indian Marriages.

However, no matter whichever religion it is, and what customs, rituals and traditions it follows all marriages are regarded as a bond that is pious in nature. It is only in Hindu religion that a marriage is considered as a bond that lasts for the next seven births. Several folklores, fables and myths have come down to us through the scriptures to reinforce the piety and indelible nature of an Indian marriage, like, the proverbial tale about Savitri who brought her dead husband back from Yamaraja and about Sati who sat on her husband’s pyre alive and turned herself into ashes as it was her duty to accompany her husband anywhere he went. All these myths or folklores, whatever, you consider they are, are present only in Hindu scriptures and do not apply to other religions, still the sense of veneration and piety that is attached to any marriage within any religion or community in India is the same, probably because most of them have been born and propagated from the mythical land of Savitri and Sati.


To know more about Indian Marriage, please visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com

Thursday, 22 December 2011

Choosing Your Wedding Palette

Indian weddings are a mirror reflection of India’s culture which is a brilliant amalgamation of various hues and shades and lends the ‘exotic’ quotient which is generally associated to the India. Indian weddings are normally radiant with a lot of colours, however, to make those colours appear to be in a harmonious synchronisation with each other and thereby add an edge to your wedding ceremony over others, you must spare a few seconds of your busy schedule in choosing the colour palette for your Indian wedding.

No matter, you are going for a theme based wedding or not, a perfect colour palette extending from the wedding invitations to the drapes used, wedding decorations like flowers and even to the cocktails served as per the theme colour, will add a sense of harmony to your wedding ceremony and reflect your style.

In order to choose your Indian wedding palette, start by sparing a few seconds for yourself and think about the colours that complement and reflect your personality. You can also look for some inspiration from decor magazines or on internet. You can also take a look at the Pantone shades for the season which is a unique choice of colours by professionals from various fields ranging from interior decoration to the fashion industry. These colours are chosen by professionals keeping in mind the latest trends which are in vogue that season. Even a colour wheel showcasing complementing and contrasting colours can also help you narrow down your choices to a few colours.

Colour palette is the defining element of every Indian wedding and strikes a mood for the celebrations, e.g. – the customary mixture of red, green, yellow and orange in an Indian wedding reflects a lively mood whereas pastel shades such as white and blush pink reflect elegance and lemon yellow, green etc propagate a fresh look.

Merely by choosing the right colours in your wedding palette, you can not only set the right mood for your wedding ceremony but also it will provide a sneak into your personality.


To read more about Indian Weddings visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com

Monday, 19 December 2011

Indian Wedding Dresses

Wedding day is the most significant event in everyone’s lives, be it a man or a woman. You wouldn’t find one creature on the face of this earth who will deny to the fact that they have dreamt about their wedding day a plethora of times and wish their wedding day to materialise exactly the way they have picturised it in their reveries. Everyone wishes to be decked like a princess/prince on their wedding day and be the head turner, the centre of attraction for the eye balls present there.

In order to don that perfect flawless dream look, every little detail about your styling on the big day must be dealt with meticulous concern and precision. And of course, wedding dresses tops the list of priorities.

In Indian weddings, although the traditional wedding dresses differs a lot across various cultures, communities, religions and regions, yet in the present scenario, lehanga choli and sarees are the wedding attires that are gaining popularity among brides across all religions, regions and communities primarily because the wide range of options and choices available owing to the fact that these two wedding dresses are being constantly explored by designers. Moreover, although salwar kameez and sharara also fall under the category of wedding dresses, yet sarees and lehangas are versatile outfits and can be draped in numerous ways to help you don’ your dream look, right from traditional, elegant, delicate, sensuous, classic and minimalistic to a royal one or a combination of all of these.

In the world of groom wears, the traditional ethnic attire and suits although continue to enjoy their elite status in the market but they are also being explored by designers to create wedding dresses that are a brilliant blend of tradition and novelty. Apart from brown and navy, rust, earthen colours and moss are the shades that are slowly invading the market in wedding suits. Ethnic wears are also being experimented with and you have a myriad of ethnic wedding dresses to choose from, e.g. - Angarkhas, Bandhgalas, Sherwanis and Kurta-pyjamas.

The only rule to dress up this wedding season seems to be aiming at breaking all the existent ones.

To read more about Indian Wedding Dresses visit:  http://www.bigindianwedding.com/

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

How to Choose an Indian Wedding Planner

Indian weddings are known worldwide for their opulence and grandeur but apart from being lavish, Indian weddings are also grand affairs spanning over a number of days.

Keeping in mind the hectic and fast paced lifestyles we have committed ourselves to, organising a wedding ceremony indeed seems to be an affair that is implausible without hiring an Indian wedding planner. Therefore, in the present scenario, Indian wedding planners are slowly assuming a role that is indispensable. No matter, the wedding is huge or a small one, a wedding planner is a must.

Owing to the significant role that the Indian wedding planners are assuming these days, the wedding planning business is growing tremendously and one can plainly notice a sudden spurt of wedding planning agencies in every street and corner of all the major cities in India. The sudden mushrooming of Indian wedding planners has indeed made the task of selecting your wedding planner a risky one. Therefore, you must be extra cautious while selecting your Indian wedding planner.

If you have already embarked upon the onerous enterprise of finding an Indian wedding planner for your wedding, chalk out a plan for yourself, like, start with consulting those friends and relatives who have got married recently and whose wedding ceremonies managed to create an overall good impression on you. If you don’t have any such references, start your research online and shortlist a few Indian wedding planners who created a good first impression on you. Then proceed to see them in person. Try to gain information about every aspect of their planning strategy and the number of weddings they handle at a time.

Next, you have got to ask them for suggestions. A good wedding planner would never hesitate to give you references. Talk to the couples who have already got their wedding ceremonies planned by that wedding planner and ask them to provide you clear-cut information about the level of commitment, perfection and co-ordination with which their wedding was planned.

After you have clarified all your doubts and queries, you may proceed to discuss and plan the budget and other significant details of your wedding.


To read more about How to Choose an Indian Wedding Planner visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com/


Sunday, 11 December 2011

Indian Wedding Reception

Indian wedding ceremonies are marked by their grandeur and opulence and the brilliance of their rituals and customs which begin well in advance of the wedding ceremony continue even after the tying of the marital knot by the couple. Although the customs and rituals in every Indian wedding differ with communities, religions and region, yet every wedding ceremony is followed by a wedding reception in India. A wedding reception maybe seen as a post wedding celebration on the part of the groom’s family to welcome the new member in their family and introduce the bride to their acquaintances and associates. This occasion is attended mainly by the groom’s side of the family and their friends and only a few close members of the bride’s family are present.

A wedding reception is also the first virtual public appearance of the newlywed couple after marriage where they seek presents and blessings from the society and relatives. Just like the wedding ceremony, the venues where a wedding reception can be organised differ widely from banquet halls, hotels, farmhouses etc to distant exotic locations like cruises, beaches etc. However, unlike the wedding, a wedding reception is not marked by any ritual or customs. It is merely the celebration on the part of the newlywed couple where gifts and blessings are received from relatives and friends by the couple who are embarking upon a new phase of their lives together. A wedding reception concludes with a grand dinner and dance and merrymaking by the couple and the guests present there. Depending upon one’s budget, some wedding receptions are also dotted with different performances by artists and dance troupes for entertainment of the guests present.

A wedding reception is just as lavish and opulent as the wedding ceremony and the venue is beautifully decorated with various types of roses, orchids and other flowers. Besides flowers, bandhani clothes, gold tissues, balloons and diyas also form part of the decorations. The venue for the wedding reception can also be decked up in accordance with a theme chosen by the couple.

To read more about Indian Wedding Reception visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com 

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Indian Wedding Planners

Gone are the days when the travesty of imaginations spun around one’s wedding ceremony was difficult to be realised in totality with all the workload and pressure heaped on the shoulders of a few male family members on the side of the bride. These days, you have the liberty to fly to most distant lands of imagination and the opportunity to watch it materialise into reality without over pressurising your family members and side by side also giving them a chance to sit back and charge their energy meters before the big event so that they too can enjoy the celebrations in the best possible way.

With the advent of wedding planners in India, the most tedious and difficult task of organising a wedding ceremony suddenly seems to have become easy with the quick availability of anything and everything on one’s fingertips. Wedding planners are a group of professional experts who not only assist you in planning the wedding but also help materialise your dreams into reality in the best possible way which also suits your wallet. It provides a one-stop solution for the entire wedding ceremony which in India is definitely too long and tiring.

With the presence of a team of experts in wedding planners division, every single ceremony, be it sagaai, sangeet, mehandi, shadi or bidai; gets a professional touch and they also help you avail all the services at a cost that is reasonable owing to their extensive contacts in the marriage service market. Every little detail of your wedding is dealt with extra care and concern by wedding planners right from arranging wedding videographers or photographers, florists for wedding decorations, caterers in wedding ceremonies, hotels, banquets mainly for wedding, makeup artists for brides, jewellers, bridal packages, musicians for wedding ceremonies, disc jockeys for enjoyment in the wedding ceremonies and last but the least, travel agents for planning the honeymoon for the newlywed couple. All of this is done by wedding planners.

Wedding planners therefore assumes several roles simultaneously; like that of a planner, organiser, visualiser, budget manager and executor. It is exactly like a platter which helps you savour anything and everything, all in the same dish.

To read more about Indian Wedding Planners visit: http://www.bigindianwedding.com/

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

The Grand Indian Wedding as a Pious Ritual


India is the mythical land of contrasts, folklores and fables, snake charmers and seers, effervescing with myths and legends and this mystical, exotic image of India is brilliantly perpetuated by Indian weddings which are known worldwide for their opulence and grandeur. However, an Indian wedding is much more of a religious and traditional ritual behind the obvious extravagance and glitz that marks the unison of two souls. In fact, Indian weddings are much more serious and ritualistic affairs in comparison to marriages performed anywhere else in the world. Unlike marriages in the west, nuptial knots in the Indian culture are less of a legal or social affair and are regarded with a sense of veneration and piety.

An Indian wedding is often confused with a Hindu marriage ceremony; however, it is just one of the many different kinds of wedding ceremonies canopied by the term and marriages in the other major seven religions- Islam, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, Jewish, Buddhism, Jain and Christianity also fall under this category.

In Hinduism, marriage is considered a pious bond and the ‘saat phere’ taken around the Agni Devta is believed to unite two souls not just forever but for the next seven births. A lot of religious significance and sacredness is associated with the marital bond in this religion and there are several folklores coming down to us from the Hindu mythologies validating the same. E.g.-the proverbial tale about Savitri who brought her dead husband back to life from the God of Death, Yamaraj and about Sati who sat on her dead husband’s pyre and converted herself to ashes as it was her duty as a wife to accompany her husband wherever he went.

The validity of all these tales/incidents cannot be arrived at, however, even if these were mere myths and legends, nevertheless, one can clearly visualise the impact it was meant to effect on people-that of marriage being an indelible and pious bond for ages and births. The other major religions in India have although different wedding rituals and customs, yet everywhere, weddings are regarded with the same sense of veneration and piety as in Hinduism, probably because most of them have been born and propagated from India, the mythical land of Savitri and Sati.

To read more about Indian Wedding as a Pious Ritual visit : http://www.bigindianwedding.com/