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Showing posts with label wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding. Show all posts

Wedding Vows



I, (Bride/Groom), take you (Groom/Bride), to be my (wife/husband), to have and to hold from this day forward, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish; from this day forward until death do us part.

I, (name), take you, (name), to be my [opt: lawfully wedded] (husband/wife), my constant friend, my faithful partner and my love from this day forward. In the presence of God, our family and friends, I offer you my solemn vow to be your faithful partner in sickness and in health, in good times and in bad, and in joy as well as in sorrow. I promise to love you unconditionally, to support you in your goals, to honor and respect you, to laugh with you and cry with you, and to cherish you for as long as we both shall live.

I (name), take you (name) to be my (husband/wife), my partner in life and my one true love. I will cherish our union and love you more each day than I did the day before. I will trust you and respect you, laugh with you and cry with you, loving you faithfully through good times and bad, regardless of the obstacles we may face together. I give you my hand, my heart, and my love, from this day forward for as long as we both shall live.

In the presence of God and these our friends I take thee to be my husband/wife, promising with Divine assistance to be unto thee a loving and faithful husband/wife so long as we both shall live.

I, (name), take you, (name), to be my friend, my lover, the (mother/father) of my children and my (husband/wife). I will be yours in times of plenty and in times of want, in times of sickness and in times of health, in times of joy and in times of sorrow, in times of failure and in times of triumph. I promise to cherish and respect you, to care and protect you, to comfort and encourage you, and stay with you, for all eternity.

I, [name], choose you [name] to be my [husband/wife], to respect you in your successes and in your failures, to care for you in sickness and in health, to nurture you, and to grow with you throughout the seasons of life.


Looking for your wedding vows - those special words that will marry you? Here is an assortment of traditional and non-traditional, religious and secular wedding vows to get you started. If you are getting married in a religious setting, check with your officiant as she/he may have specific words that you cannot deviate from. Otherwise, feel free to add your own embellishments, loving words, funny promises (I promise to always make your favorite apple pie!) and inside jokes.
Wedding Vows

I, (name), take you, (name), to be my partner, loving what I know of you, and trusting what I do not yet know. I eagerly anticipate the chance to grow together, getting to know the (man/woman) you will become, and falling in love a little more every day. I promise to love and cherish you through whatever life may bring us.

After both have said individual vows, they may wish to say something in unison such as:

Entreat me not to leave you, or to return from following after you, For where you go I will go, and where you stay I will stay. Your people will be my people, and your God will be my God. And where you die, I will die and there I will be buried. May the Lord do with me and more if anything but death parts you from me.

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Bridal Beauty Countdown

 

 Time is ticking on the beauty stopwatch for you to get perfectly primped and prepped for your celebration. Here’s a hit list of what you need to do, when.


Think of your wedding day as a beauty marathon. Training starts on engagement day. After you’ve phoned your parents and best friends and emailed the world your good news, the next things on the list are picking the date and putting a serious beauty schedule together. Work with your esthetician to organize a schedule of treatments (and a host of between-service home-care products) tailored to your specific wants and needs. Remember to book all your appointments in advance so you can get what you want, when you want it. Not sure when to start your beauty blitz? We’ve created a bridal beauty countdown to help you on the way to your big day. 
Nine Months Before
• Get into facials. Treatments can help remove toxins as well as purify, moisturize and cleanse the skin.
• If you have a serious skin concern like broken capillaries, uneven skin tone, adult acne or rosacea, consult a dermatologist. They’ll be able to create a skin-care strategy to treat your issues.
• If you have unwanted body hair, consider permanent hair removal with electrolysis or laser.
• If you have spider or varicose veins, investigate vascular surgery, as veins can be easily zapped away. Book a consultation to go over procedure options.
• Look after your nails. To keep nails naturally healthy, start getting regular manicures ASAP!
• Tend to your tootsies. Start a proper foot-care regime. Moisturize, elevate your feet when resting, dip into hot-water footbaths and make sure your shoes fit properly.
Six Months Before
• Stay with your regime! Keep up with facials—book one every six weeks to get glowing skin.
• Decide on your makeup. Will you do your own wedding makeup, make an appointment at a local salon or hire a makeup artist? Research the best salons and get recommendations from friends.
• De-stress! Set aside one night a week to fill the tub with a relaxing scent like lavender, light some aromatherapy candles, then just lie back and relax.
• Book a massage—it’s a great way to release stress, pent-up energy and bring life back to your body.
Three Months Before
• Assess any breakouts. Is your wedding stress causing facial flare-ups? Look for blemish creams that contain retinol, salicylic acid or antibacterial benzoyl peroxide to combat clogged pores more efficiently.
• Start collecting inspirational photos. These should reflect what you want for your wedding-day makeup. Schedule a trial to discuss what is best for you.
• Book your makeup artist for your wedding day, too.
• Don’t forget your brows! Make an appointment with a pro to create the perfect set for you. Book follow-up sessions every four weeks to keep your arches clean.
• Try reflexology. It’s a great way to unwind and stay healthy. It helps to stabilize the body, improve circulation, release blocked energy and eliminate toxins.
• Get bikini-ready and book your waxing. See an esthetician for a trial run weeks before the big day—you don’t want an adverse reaction!
• Book your manicure and pedicure. Book ahead to get an optimum time slot for either the day before or day of your wedding.
One Month Before
• Stop cheating! If you have been cheating on your beauty schedule, get religious about it now. Cleanse, tone and moisturize your face twice a day and never sleep with your makeup on!
• Have your trial makeup done. Discuss what you love and what you don’t and get your look down for the day.
• Indulge in a special wedding-day fragrance. Be sure to try it out for a day to make certain you love it.
• Try a back facial. If you’re wearing a strapless gown, get prepped! Treatments often include cleansing, exfoliation, toning and massage.
One Week Before
• Have your final facial. This is the absolute latest you should have your final facial. When booking your service, ask for an eye treatment as well.
• Treat yourself to a rub-down. Make one last appointment for a relaxing massage.
• Need some colour? Try a spray-on tan two days before your wedding day, as you want to ensure the product has settled, and leaves you with a natural-looking tan.
• Get some zzzs. Hit the sack early every night. Your body will thank you for it.

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Australian Wedding Ideas

Nameeta and Tharan’s Sri Lankan Hindu Wedding, Concord, Sydney

Stunning. That’ s the only word to describe this beautiful traditional Sri Lankan/Indian Hindu wedding and reception over two days in Sydney. Nameeta and Tharan chose a rich burgundy red, cream and gold palette for their traditional ceremony and Nameeta stole the show in her purple, yellow gold and pink George Gross Harry Who gown for the reception. An elegant, classical event that is utterly inspiring.
Couple:  Nameeta & Tharan
Date:  9th & 10th December, 2010
Location: Concord Function Centre, Concord, NSW and QVB Tea Room, Sydney, NSW.
Photography: Milk and Honey Photography
Sri Lankan couple on their wedding day in Sydney
Sri Lankan bride preparing for her vows on her wedding day
Bride with henna hands and traditional Sri Lankan hair accessories for wedding
Sri Lankan Bride on her wedding day in Sydney
Sri Lankan Bride and Groom on their wedding day in Sydney
Sri Lankan bridesmaids at Concord Function Centre in Sydney
Indian Hindu wedding ceremony at Concord Function Centre in Sydney
Detail of hands at Indian Hindu wedding ceremony in Sydney
Sri Lankan wedding couple married at Concord Function Centre in Sydney
Bride in George Gross Harry Who gown at the QVB Tearooms, Sydney
Bride and Groom with gold tie at QVB building for wedding reception
George Gross Harry Who gown
Bride with George Gross Harry Who gown and henna hands at wedding reception at QVP Tea Rooms
Place cards at a wedding at the QVB Tearooms in Sydney
Wedding reception at the QVB Tea Rooms in Sydney
Wedding couple cutting Faye Cahill wedding cake at the QVB Tearooms, Sydney
Slice of wedding cake served with ice cream at a wedding at the QVB Tearoom Sydney
Gown:  Saree from India. Evening gown for reception from George Gross Harry Who.
Suit: The wedding suit is from an Indian store in Liverpool, NSW. The reception suit is the Arthur Galan classic two button dinner suit.
Hair:  Amore Hair
Makeup:  Makeup Boudoir, Pyrmont, NSW.
Ceremony: The Concord Function Centre was chosen due to their experience with Hindu weddings and their exceptional food.
Reception: The QVB Tea Room, Sydney, NSW. A nice elegant location, classic theme, high ceilings and exceptional food. We loved the furnishings and  decorations.
Music: DJ Celebrations (Fourth Ave, Blacktown, NSW ph: 0401819453).
Decoration: Indian Decorations from Exlusive Wedding Mandaps by Roshilla, Castle Hill, NSW. Reception decorations self-sourced from Nest Homewares.
Stationery: Wedding stationary from 123Weddings in India and reception stationary from IDove Design.
Cake: Faye Cahill, designed by ourselves in conjunction with Faye based on a previous design.
Budget Tip: Suprisingly, wedding stationary can be made overseas quite inexpensively, inclusive of the shipping charges. Consider purchasing your own center pieces and then selling them on eBay afterwards instead of renting.
Eco-friendly Tip: Use candles to replace some lights.
Something Special: Weddings can be stressful times. Try to enjoy the process and enjoy the special day.

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Contemporary Vietnamese Traditional Weddings

This isang and her husband. In Vietnam, wedding photographs are taken in advance, usually in a studio - the bride wears heavy make-up and a complicated hairstyle For the photographs on this page, we've used the wedding of one of our staff members, Ms. Hang. Hang and Mr. Minh, her husband, now have a year-old son and are very happy!
The pace of change
Modern traditional weddings in Vietnam differ significantly to those in the past. The most obvious change is the cost – the social pressure of ‘face’ leads some families to spend up to the equivalent of ten year’s salary. Another obvious difference is the average age of the couple.

In the past, a groom of 20 with an 18-year-old bride would be considered an ideal couple. Today, education, a degree of female emancipation, and the need to pursue a career have raised the figures by five or even ten years for middle-class city dwellers. Working class couples tend to marry earlier.
Contemporary beliefs
The tradition of matchmaking has largely faded away, but most parents have firm views – were they to decide that the prospective spouse was unsuitable, most young people would accept the verdict and break off the relationship.

Some young people seek the services of an astrologer in advance to determine whether their future liaison will be successful. If the result were negative, most would withdraw.
Women a couple of years over 30 are considered to be past their sell-by date - for men, it’s a about 35. The possibility of being left on the shelf is frightening, especially for women. As the deadline draws nearer, individuals’ and families’ criteria become looser – better an unsuitable partner than no partner!
Arranging the marriage
The first stage of marriage is usually when the young man's parents consult a fortune-teller to see whether the couple is destined to live together as husband and wife. If so, he will formally request the young woman's hand.

Hang in her normal clothesThe actual request is made by a party comprising the young man's parents, or aunt and uncle if he is an orphan, and a go-between who go to meet the young woman's parents. The party takes gifts such as betel leaves and areca nuts, and asks what the family requires for their daughter’s hand. The young woman's parents will usually ask for a sum of money to cover the costs of the marriage preparations.
The engagement
The next stage in the process is the engagement, which, once the consent has been given, usually follows several months after. However, in some circumstances such as university or one partner working abroad, it can be much longer.

Vietnamese people believe that some days are particularly auspicious, so choosing appropriate days for the engagement and the wedding is another task for the fortune-teller.
If the fiancée or her family breaks off the engagement for any reason, all of the gifts must be returned to the young man's family. If the fiancé backs out before the big day, her family keeps them.
The engagement is a solemn ceremony. On the day, the young man will travel with his family to the young woman's house bearing gifts of betel nuts, cake, wine, cigarettes and so on. Young women wear red ao dais and a banquet is held after formal rituals are performed before the ancestral altar. The engagement ceremony is a chance for the young woman's family to meet their future son-in-law.
The groom and his family travel to the bride's house by cyclo, bearing giftsThe wedding day
The final stage is the wedding day. Traditionally, the couple must stay apart on the day before to prevent bad luck. On the night before, the bride's mother will tend her daughter’s hair with several combs. Every comb means something, but the most important is the third comb - at that time she will ask for luck and happiness her new home.

On the big day, the bride’s family and invited guests assemble at her house to await the arrival of the bridegroom. Shortly before the groom’s party is due, the bride slips away to don her wedding dress.
Seven young men carry the gifts and pass them to seven young menGifts from the groom's family
The groom’s parents and immediate relatives are preceded by an odd number of young men smartly dressed in shirt and tie, and dark trousers. They each carry a tray covered in a red cloth, or alternatively a large red and gold canister, containing gifts of betel leaves, areca nuts, wine, fruit, cakes, tea and so on.

In the past, they would have walked, but today most wedding parties opt for cars and change to cyclos for the last part of the journey.
Red is the dominant colour in a traditional Vietnamese wedding – it’s considered a lucky colour and will lead to a rosy future.
The gifts are received and placed on the wedding altarUpon arrival the young men dismount and are met by the same number of young women dressed in red ao dais. The men hand the gifts to the women who take them inside.
Each young woman hands her male counterpart a small amount of money to designate that they are ‘working’ – there is a superstition that being an unpaid helper at a wedding will mean that you won’t marry.
Accepting the gifts
The leading couple of the groom’s party enters the bride’s house carrying a tray of small cups of wine and invite the brides parents to take a sip. By accepting the toast, the bride’s parents symbolically agree to admit the groom’s party. A few years ago, this would be accompanied by firecrackers, but many accidents and a subsequent ban put an end to the tradition.

The groom's family introduce themselves and ask permission for their son to marry his bride. A Master of Ceremonies (usually a respected person chosen from the bride's relatives) instructs the bride’s parents to present their daughter. The bride then enters. Traditionally, this will be a red au dai. The groom will wear a dark suit or, more traditionally, a black ao dai.
The  couple and the family worship the ancestors to ask for a successful marriageThe ceremony
The wedding ceremony begins in front of the altar. The bride and the groom kneel down and pray, asking their ancestors' permission to be married and their blessing on their family-to-be. The couple then turn around and bow to the bride's parents to thank them for raising and protecting her since birth.

They then bow their heads towards each other to show their gratitude and respect to their soon-to-be husband or wife. The Master of Ceremonies then advises the wedding couple on starting a new family and the two sets of parents take turns to share their experiences and give blessings.
The groom and the bride then exchange wedding rings, and the parents give the newly wedded couple gold bracelets, earrings and other valuable gifts.
There are many guests at the wedding banquet - often  in the hundreds. It's a jolly occasion with plenty to eat and drinkThe wedding banquet
After the marriage, both wedding parties leave to join guests that were not invited to the marriage ceremony at a large banquet. This is usually a large gathering, often in the hundreds and sometimes more. The groom, bride, and their family are once again introduced to the guests and everyone drinks a toast. Dinner or lunch is served at the table.

During the reception, the groom, bride, and their parents visit each table to thank their guests. In return, the guests give envelopes containing wedding cards, money gifts and a blessing to the newly wedded couple.After the banquet, the groom’s party and the bride leave for the groom’s house, where she will live. Later, the bride’s party follows to inspect the accommodation - particularly the marital chamber.

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Brazilian Wedding


Brazilian Wedding Tradition

Traditional wedding celebrations and Brazilian folklore are among the richest and most expressive of the world, rich in songs, legends, dances, beliefs, and foods. The mixture of Indigenous, Negro, and Caucasian races forms the Brazilian Nation, creating an intense diversity in wedding traditions and a vast cultural experience we can all enjoy.The numerous traditions in Brazilian culture , the phases of the moon, for example, determine when to plant and when to sow. Some folkloric traditions of Brazil are brought to us by Brazilian brides and grooms and give us many traditions for wedding celebrations.

Bride:
The bride must be late, not 30 mins, but at least 10 minutes after the groom, you don't want to get there before him, do you?
 
Dance:
Pagode is a form of samba (a dance) which is often played and danced at weddings. Lots of wonderful Samba music.

Dinner Tables:
Tables (instead of numbering) can be named after cities in Brazil that the guests are from.

Donkey:
Bumba-Meu-Boi ~ A man would prove his worth as a suitable husband by his ability to tame an unbridled donkey.If his attempts were successful, he had permission to marry the daughter of the man who owned the donkey. This tradition we here of often but it was just from a particular area of Brazil and Cape Cod has few donkeys but many lovely Brazilian ladies.

Drinks:
Capirinha is a Brazilian drink made of an alcohol called "cachaça" (cashassa) which is like rum but made from sugar cane instead of molasses then put into very sweet limeade.Ingredients1 lime quartered1 tablespoon of sugar1 shot of cachaça / vodka is a substitute1/2 Cup of ice cubes with waterPrepare:Place the lime and sugar in the bottom of a glass.Using the handle of a wooden spoon, crush and mashthe limes. Pour the liqueur and ice. Stir well.1 lime2 ounces of cachaçaSugar to tasteIce cubesWash the lime and roll it on the board to loosen the juices. Cut the lime into pieces and place them in a glass. Sprinkle with the sugar and crush the pieces (pulp side up) with a pestle. Just enough to release the juice, otherwise it will get bitter. Add the cachaça and stir to mix. Add the ice and stir again. It is delicious and potent!You can also make a pitcher of caipirinha. Figure out how many people and multiply amounts. If you can't find cachaça where you live, use a good vodka. The drink will then be called caipiroshka. No vodka? Use white rum and you will have a caipiríssima. Caipirinhas made with sake are all the rage in Rio now! Try one...Top of pageEngagement Rings:
In Brazil, both bride-to-be and groom-to-be wear an engagement ring. The tradition is very different in Brazil, if you are getting engaged both of you have to wear an engagement ring on your right hands, when you get married you switch , you put the ring on the left hand.
Flag:
Groomsmen can carry or be pinned with a small Brazilian flag instead of a flower..
Food:Give "casadinhos" is a wedding favor: they are Brazilian cookies and their name in English is "well-married" cookies.

6 xEgg yolks
3 xEgg whites, well beaten
250 gmSugar
300 gmFlour
3/4 tblBaking powder

InstructionsInstructions: This is from Brazil and its called "Casadinhos" (diminutive for married in Portuguese). They are two cookies (about two in. diameter) put together with Marmalade, honey, jam, Boston cream, fudge, something sweet. I have two recipes, but never tried them. You can also make a white cake, cut it in squares or circles, and put two pieces together with the filling you like.

Golden part of the cake should be on the outer side. When you have a marriage, you make the casadinhos, then roll them in (confectioner) sugar and wrap* each one of them nicely, like wedding favors. Then they are called "Bem Casados" (nicely, well married in Portuguese), a wish for a sweet life together. You can distribute them to the guests as they live the reception, after the dessert or cake is served, with the wedding favors...

* They are usually wrapped in cellophane , and then crepe paper, but you can do it any way you like. You can add vanilla sugar or cinnamon to the sugar.

Mix all ingredients but the filling, adding the baking powder last. Open the dough with the rolling pin and cut it with cookie cutter (the traditional shape is a circle) Bake the cookies in a greased and floured cookie sheet. After they are baked, put the cookies together, two at a time, with the filling. Flat (bottom) side of the cookie inside. Then roll them in sugar.At a Brazilian wedding reception, the guests arrive at the specified time and stayed until the food is all gone. All exhausted, well fed and happy. It is fun!


Honeymoon:The Groom must pick the bride up to walk in to the new house/hotel room holding her on his arms and step inside with the right foot for the first night.


License:
One of the main differences is in Brazil there is the signing of the marriage license as part of the ceremony.

Parent’s Gift:
The Bride and Groom should give his parents a small present, and vice versa.

Prayer:
A prayer said in Portuguese is a very nice touch for Brazilian guests.

Song:
Brazilian song (by Vinicius de Morais), or the national anthem.

Translator:
We also had a translator present, so all parties understand the whole service (except for the special music, which was all in Portuguese).Top of page.Wedding Dress:
The Bride is supposed to be late and if the groom sees her dress before the wedding it is considered very bad luck. The groom CANNOT see the bride dressed up before the
ceremony, he can't even see her gown, he'll only see it when she arrives for the wedding.In Brazil it can be difficult to find tuxes and matching dresses for them, so they just all wore whatever formal wear that could be found. Brazilian brides usually rent their wedding gown for a savings on its one time use. Like men rent tuxes here.


Wedding Party
I think the most different thing is the "padrinhos" (the wedding party. In Brazil, they don't pick them separately: bride's maids and groom's men. They choose couples--married or not, they even match them up .They usually have three couples on each side.

Wedding Rings:
Another thing is .....do not drop your wedding bands at the time of exchange, it is known that if that happens your marriage won't last.

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Malay Wedding

A Malay wedding is usually performed when either one or both spouses are Malay. Malaysian law defines a Malay person as a Muslim.Malay weddings are grand affairs where the couple is treated as royalty. The traditional wedding ceremony is in two parts. The first part is the akad nikah (marriage contract), which is the legal and religious part of the wedding. The second part is the bersanding (enthronement), which is a family celebration. It is usual for the two parts to be celebrated over two days. However, it is becoming common for there to be a gap between the parts of the wedding, during which the couple are legally married, but saving up for an elaborate bersanding. In cases where the couple have family spread around the world, a number of bersanding may be held in different countries to allow everyone to wish the couple well.

Adat Merisik
The adat merisik (asking ceremony, or more literally 'spying custom') is the traditional Malay system for arranging marriages. When it is time for a young man to get married, his family will look around to identify a number of potential brides. Nowadays, the man might suggest to his family who he would like them to consider, and it may be that a romantic link already exists between the man and woman. Having decided upon one particular woman, the merisik, or investigation process, takes place.

For this ceremony one or more representatives (wakil) of the man's family pay a friendly visit to the family of the woman whom they have in mind as his potential bride. The visit is purely for the purpose of further investigation, and it gives the visitors the chance to see the woman. A hint will be given to her parents regarding the purpose of the visit, and their reaction will be assessed. The woman's parents may also give the visitors some idea as to whether or not their daughter would be interested in the match. The merisik does not constitute a formal proposal. Following the visit both sides can begin to think more seriously about the possibility or otherwise of a marriage. It is possible that no progress may take place, and the man's parents or representatives will then look for another possible bride.



Adat Bertunang
As soon as a man announces his wish to marry, an engagement date will be set when families of the couple meet to discuss the wedding plans. The adat bertunang (engagement custom) is normally held at the bride's home.

Akad Nikah
A Malay wedding proper begins with the akad nikah (marriage contract) ceremony. The groom signs the marriage contract and agrees to provide the bride with a mas kahwin (mahar,literally 'marriage gold' in form of money or goods or anything as requested by the bride).It is opposite to dowry where the mas khawin is paid by the groom to the bride. The mas khawin is a symbol to show that the men is willing and are prepared to build a family with the lady he chose to get married to. The contract signing is done before a religious official and is accompanied by prayer.

If the bersanding is to take place the next day, the couple's hands are dyed with henna during the berinai besar (great henna-ing) ceremony. The bride's hair is also trimmed, eyebrows shaped and make-up applied by a beautician, known as the mak andam. Then the bride puts on her tudung (hijab or headscarf) to cover their hair and a selendang, or embroidered and beaded shawl over that. A crown is also placed on top of the shawl. If the bersanding does not take place on the day following the nikah, these preparation customs are delayed until the bersanding.



Bersanding

The actual wedding day is the Bersanding. This literally means the "sitting together of the bride and bridegroom on the bridal couch". Known as the Pelamin, this couch is the centrepiece of the whole ceremony, and two pelamins are required - one in the bride's house and the other in the bridegroom's. As the Bersanding ceremony customarily takes place in the afternoon, the bridegroom entertains guests at his own house in the morning. The bersanding (enthronement) ceremony begins with the groom's procession with friends, relatives, musicians and people waving bunga manggar (palm blossom) to meet the bride. Often various good-humoured attempts are made to waylay or stop the groom from getting to the bride. The main part of the bersanding involves the seating of the bridal couple on a dais and sprinkling them with yellow rice and scented water by family members, relatives and guests as a sign of blessing. Each guest will receive a bunga telur (egg flower), a decorated egg with a fabric flower, as a sign of fertility. The couple are considered royalty for the day, and so various royal customs are performed for them, including musicians playing court music and 'bodyguards' performing a display of Silat (traditional Malay martial arts).

After the bersanding ceremonyAfter the bersanding ceremony, the wedded couple and their guests attend a celebratory feast called the makan beradab (formal meal). This involves the bride and groom feeding each other sweetened rice. The celebrations are concluded by posing for family photographs.

 

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Indian Wedding


Hindu wedding is thought to be the bringing of two people who are said to be compatible. Hindu wedding ceremonies are traditionally conducted at least partially in Sanskrit, the language of most holy Hindu ceremonies. The local language of the people involved is also used since most Hindus do not understand Sanskrit. They have many rituals that have evolved since traditional times and differ in many ways from the modern western wedding ceremony and also among the different regions, families, and castes such as Rajput weddings and Iyer weddings. The Hindus attach a lot of importance to marriages, and the ceremonies are very colourful and extend for several days.

In India, where most Hindus live, the laws relating to marriage differ by religion. According to 1the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955, passed by the Parliament of India, for all legal purposes, all Hindus of any caste, creed or sect, Sikh, Buddhists and Jains are deemed Hindus and can intermarry. By the Special Marriage Act, 1954, a Hindu can marry a person who is not Hindu, employing any ceremony provided specified legal conditions are fulfilled.

The pre-wedding ceremonies include engagement (involving vagdana or oral agreement and lagna-patra written declaration), and arrival of the groom's party at the bride's residence, often in the form of a formal procession. The post-wedding ceremonies involve welcoming the bride to her new home.

Despite modern Hinduism being largely based on the puja form of the worship of devas as enshrined in the Puranas, a Hindu wedding ceremony at its core is essentially a Vedic yajna (a fire-sacrifice), in which the Aryan deities are invoked in the Indo-Aryan style. It has a deep origin in the ancient ceremony of cementing the bonds of friendship/alliance , although today, it only survives in the context of weddings. The primary witness of a Hindu marriage is the fire-deity (or the Sacred Fire) Agni, and by law and tradition, no Hindu marriage is deemed complete unless in the presence of the Sacred Fire, seven encirclements have been made around it by the bride and the groom together.

Here's a video of a Hindu Wedding ( Karthi Sivakumar~ actor Surya's bro)









Reception:





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Jamaican Wedding

One Jamaican wedding tradition is a dark fruitcake liberally laced with rum is served at wedding receptions of Jamaican couples.


-Following the celebration, the wedding party slices the remainder of the wedding cake and mails them to friends and relatives unable to attend the wedding reception.


- Like most Caribbean countries, the wedding cake is prominent in the celebration. It is a rich pound cake made of dried fruits (prunes, cherries, raisins, currants) soaked in rum, plus flour, butter, and a dozen eggs. Some guests may send ingredients as wedding presents beforehand. Her Maid of Honor is referred to as the "Chief". Since many weddings are village or community celebrations, no guest is refused and can enjoy a feast featuring curried goat, rice, and rum punch. Slices of cake are mailed to guests who cannot attend.


-The wedding style is similar to an American wedding. The bride and groom primarily handle the wedding arrangements. Everyone in the village lines the streets to see a bride. Her father or both parents escort her down the aisle. Her face is veiled until her husband lifts her veil. During the ceremony the couple will go to the church office or rectory to sign the wedding certificate. The bride may change her attire into a formal dress or during the reception.


-The bride's matron of honor is known as the Chief, the flower girl carries the train.


-Curried goat and rice is included on the menu of a traditional Jamaican wedding. The goat is killed and cooked prior to the wedding celebration day. Rum punch, including a red sweet fruit syrup, rum pimento and lime is traditionally served. (A very smooth drink but quite potent.) Champagne and wine and spirits are also served.


-The wedding cake, usually a dark cake, has been soaked for about a year so the fruits and bread will be flavored and moist.


-The wedding reception often lasts until the sun comes up. With Jamaican hospitality, no guest is refused, even if they come uninvited.

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