Wedding Inspiration from Parmish Verma and Guneet Grewal’s Marriage
Punjabi singer and actor Parmish Verma tied knots with his fiancée Guneet Grewal on 19th October 2021 in a big-fat Punjabi wedding ceremony. They hosted a traditional Punjabi wedding with all the wedding traditions like mehndi, sangeet, haldi, and others. The close family members and friends from Parmish Verma’s side made their presence to his lavish wedding affair. The wife of Parmish Verma, i.e. the bride is a Canadian Politician and a lawyer. The couple exchanged rings on October 16th in Canada. The wedding took place a few days later the engagement ceremony. Guneet took the surname of Parmish Verma after the marriage. The wedding was such a success that it can be in the list of “wedding inspiration” for upcoming grooms and brides.
Outfit Inspiration
The couple wore grandiose and dazzling ethnic wedding attire. The “Rocky Mental” actor wore a light-textured sherwani with complex embellishment. He complimented his “dulha” attire with a red shade turban and a matching stole. The bride, on the other hand, selected a stunning red lehenga with heavy embroidery. Guneet decided to accessorize her attires with bold jewelry including maang tika, a choker necklace, pakha, big natha, kaleeras, chooda, and many more. Her red-colored chooda matched up with golden kaleere and dark texture henna enhanced more grace of her overall look. Both of them looked amazingly stunning in their wedding outfits.
Different wedding traditions
Engagement ceremony
The wedding celebrations of Punjabi Actor with the hashtag #NoMoreShadaa began within an intimate engagement ceremony. Guneet wore a green ‘Sabyasachi lehenga’ that was embellished with multi-colored floral work. The attire came with a matching and a contrasting red dupatta highlighting traditional golden tassel details on the border. The bride styled the outfit with a maang tika, heavy earrings, and a matching choker necklace. Nude lips & a green bindi gracefully adored her overall look. Parmish looked charming in his black tuxedo teamed with a crisp white shirt.
Mehendi ceremony
The couple made only one photograph of their mehndi public and it’s sufficient to leave us mesmerized. Parmish and Guneet looked coming dressed straight out of dreams in their wedding attire. The bride opted for an embroidered magenta shade gharara matched with a heavy dupatta with some shades of gold and white. Parmish kept his look traditional with a white Pathani set and enhanced the glam with a gold necklace. She chose to keep her makeup minimal with shimmery eyes. A pair of danglers and Maatha Patti added the delicate charm to the mehndi look.
Jaggo Night
Jaggo night is the must-have tradition performed in every Punjabi wedding and Parmish and wedding festivities are nothing different. The couple had an extravagant jaggo night and danced with their heart out. The gorgeous duo left us all speechless while making a style quotient. Parmish defined major groom goals in a black embroidered kurta set with a debonair Nehru jacket. The bride Guneet Grewal redefined the word radiant when she was dressed in a heavy orange lehenga from the recent collection of Manish Malhotra while making a remarkable entry.
Wedding ceremony
Parmish and Guneet commemorated their love with the Anand Karaj ceremony. The spotless white decorations lent composed vibes and doubled up the backdrop for the vibrant outfits of the couple. The bride festooned herself in a remarkable red Manish Malhotra designed regal lehenga for the D-day! Nailing the maximalist vibe, Guneet paired her ornate lehenga with equally heavy jewels. Multi-layer necklaces with emerald accents, the combo of heavy passa and maang tikka, an oversized nath, matching heavy earrings gave the bride Maharani look! The traditional kaleeras and chooda gave the look a level of perfection. The groom looked spruce in a pastel sherwani with a contrasting red turban.
This marriage ceremony truly comes out as a wedding inspiration to almost all of the Punjabi Grooms and Brides that can adapt the look to make a grand entry on their “D-day”.
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