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Your marriage date is fixed and you have started shopping for your marriage. Great. Wedding is a special occasion and as a prospective bride, you have all the right to shop to your heart’s content. Well, shopping to your heart’s content is good but shopping should be planned properly. Planning should be impeccable, when it is about your wedding saree and your wedding jewelry.
It is your marriage and you are the center of attraction on that day. Therefore, your saree should be elegant and bright. The color of your saree should suit your skin complexion. Whether you have fair skin or not is not the cause of concern. You just need to select a saree shop that offers a wide range of sarees for wedding Once you select a saree shop, you just need to look into their collection and find the one, which you find suitable for the day.
Theme marriage has become quite popular these days. If you are also planning a theme marriage, it is very important for you to match the color and design of your saree with the theme of the occasion. Wedding is a special occasion. Therefore, you should not make any kind of compromise with the quality or design of the saree. If you make compromise for money, you might not be able to get the best saree for the day. To get the best effect of the designer saree that you select for your wedding, you should match your jewelries with it. Before purchasing a wedding saree, you should ensure that it is perfect for the day. Therefore, it is always suggested to purchase wedding saree in advance.
However again wedding sarees differ in appearance and outlook with different cultures spread over India, each having their own customs and rituals to furnish wedding ceremonies. Bengali wedding ceremonies and Central Eastern cultures of India generally opt for a bright red ornamented and heavily embroidered. These are referred to as Benarasi Sarees. Elsewhere in the hills of North East and their tribes, the wedding saree lies assorted from Assam Silk “Mekhla”, predominantly in Assam, to silken “dokhna” and “dakmanda” of Boro and Garo tribes. Traditionally their sarees are not full body but consist of a lower wrap covering the legs and upper and upper wrap or a shawl.The “Moirangfee” saree is also selected as the wedding attire for certain North East Indian tribes. It bears a similarity in texture to the Bengali “jamdani” or “Nepali dhakai cloth”. Sarees with Red borders having dark blue or white backgrounds are the common colors for wedding sarees of this region.
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