
[section title=”The Planning”]
[field title=”Wedding Colors”]
Welcome party: cream, moss and burgundy Sangeet: red, orange, peach, with pops of teal and green Wedding: cream, peach, persimmon, moss green, gold
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[field title=”Design / Vibe / Vision”]
New York City is where Ayesha and Ben are happiest and where they call home. The energy of the city feels inherently celebratory, vibrant, and deeply welcoming to the couple. It felt natural to anchor such an important part of their lives in a city that brings them such joy. Practically, it was also conducive to their global guest list (with a portion of their 220 guests traveling in from about a dozen countries). The weekend was filled with a range of celebrations: a Mendhi, welcome party, Baraat, Jai Maala, Saat Pheras ceremony, and Sangeet all transpired before the big day itself. Ayesha initially experienced the New York Public Library as a 5-year-old visiting from Mumbai. She was one of those girls who dreamed about her wedding when she was little, and remembers standing in front of the iconic venue in complete awe of its scale and history. Ayesha and Ben both wanted to get married in a place that felt timeless. Somewhere, they could return year after year. They took pride in choosing a venue that has welcomed multicultural celebrations and where many milestones have been hosted.
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[field title=”Proposal Story”]
Ayesha and Ben got engaged on April 4, 2024, at Wildflower Farms—a secluded Auberge resort in upstate New York. He had been planning the surprise for months, telling Ayesha only that they were going away for the weekend and refusing to share a single detail. What she didn’t know was that he had coordinated with the property’s owners to propose under a tree-lined canopy by the river with champagne waiting. The day before, a torrential rainstorm rolled in and washed out the original plan, forcing him to pivot at the last minute. With their help, he transformed a fireside cottage on the property to serve as the new setting and led his bride-to-be there under the guise of a simple romantic morning stroll. Inside, with the rain tapping against the windows and a fire crackling, Ben got down on one knee. “There is nothing like seeing your best friend in life kneel in that formal, intentional way and ask the biggest question you’ll ever hear,” Ayesha recalls. “I was so overwhelmed that I completely forgot to look at the ring—until I did, and nearly fainted.” The five-carat pear-shaped diamond with French-cut emeralds set into a platinum band is an ode to the women in Ayesha’s maternal line, all of whom wear pear-shaped rings. Over time, the pear has become a symbol in her family, even woven into the wedding day’s crest, so it was a deeply personal choice. The rest of the weekend was slow and joyful: feeding animals at the farm, indulgent farm-to-table meals, and, of course, lots of Champagne! That weekend, Ayesha and Ben gathered their immediate families for a celebratory dinner at the Bowery Hotel—a location that they (and many others) gathered at once more for the couple’s welcome party and Sangeet.
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[board_carousel title=”Getting Ready”]





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[board_carousel title=”Bridal Portraits”]


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[board_carousel title=”Flat Lays”]




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[board_carousel title=”First Look”]








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[section title=”The Fashion”]
[field title=”Wedding Gown”]
For the Welcome Party, it was all about setting the tone for the weekend with a visual conversation that married history and reinvention. Something old and something new. Sandra Mansour’s atelier allowed Ayesha to reimagine one of her “Quiet Fields” silhouettes in a custom ivory-gold palette, a subtle twist on the traditional bridal white. To ground the modernity of the dress, she paired it with Dior slingbacks from 2010. A Mendhi kickstarted the wedding weekend, with Ayesha donning saffron-hued Dolly J and her grandmother’s vintage jewels. A change into custom Sandra Mansour and vintage Dior heels for the welcome party set the tone of old-meets-new. For the Baraat, Jai Maala, Saat Pheras ceremony, and Sangeet downtown at the Bowery Hotel, the couple chose pieces by Masaba, with Ayesha adding a 600-year-old gold belt worn by generations of women in her family, and then they both changed into custom Rohit and Rahul for the latter half of the night. Vera Wang’s “Mia” was the very first gown Ayesha pulled to try on — and she was instantly drawn to it. She had a gut feeling it was the one. There was something about its structure and movement that felt like a mirror of her personality: elegant and timeless, yet young, feminine, and a touch irreverent. The soft tulle through the center reminded her of a ballerina mid-motion, and the way the dress moved felt alive. It embodied everything she wanted in that moment — grace with a little edge, romance with confidence. For her final look of the weekend, Ayesha wanted something that felt like both a revelation and a release — something ultra-comfortable yet undeniably luxurious. The Dottie dress from Danielle Frankel’s newest “X Clementine” collection embodied exactly that balance. Its ethereal draping and heavenly-soft textures moved effortlessly, allowing the bride to dance and celebrate without constraint. After a weekend of layered meaning and tradition, Ayesha wanted to begin her marriage in total newness — and wearing the newest collection piece felt like the most poetic way to step into that next chapter. In Hindu tradition, the color black is believed to ward off the “nazar” — the evil eye — a quiet form of protection during life’s most auspicious moments. Wanting to weave that symbolism into her bridal look, Ayesha chose to forgo conventional white accessories for black ones instead. Black Khaite heels and Jennifer Behr earrings became modern talismans — elegant, sculptural pieces that balanced purity with power, and paid homage to heritage through subtle rebellion. She also slipped on a diamond tennis necklace that her parents gifted her, which felt like a symbolic way of them ushering her through the momentous occasion.
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[field title=”Bridesmaid Dresses”]
Ayesha’s nine bridesmaids started their day in sage green silk pajama sets and NYPL sweatshirts before changing into burnt orange dresses in a variety of silhouettes.
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[field title=”Groomsman Attire”]For Ben, the couple wanted a look that would stand the test of time — the ultimate expression of classic tailoring and quiet confidence. A Tom Ford tuxedo, with its impeccable structure and rich black twill, felt like the natural choice: sophisticated, enduring, and unmistakably timeless. It anchored the evening’s elegance with simplicity and strength.[/field]
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[board_carousel title=”Ceremony”]










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[board_carousel title=”Cocktail Hour”]




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[section title=”The Details”]
[field title=”Food & Drink”]
Dinner began with a gem lettuce salad with mustard vinaigrette, figs, and Parmesan cheese. Guests then chose from a trio of entrees: miso-glazed cod, NY strip steak, or butternut ravioli. It was important to the couple to include a vegetarian entree in the main selections and not as an alternate, as many of Ayesha’s Hindu family members are vegetarian, and Pinch Food Design, which catered the event, was eager to oblige. A global offering of wines was on offer to pair with the meal. Guests also signed special bottles for the newlyweds to toast with on milestone anniversaries. The bride’s family brought in special red wine from their home cellar to be poured tableside, all coming from California vineyards they had visited together.
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[field title=”Florals & Decor”]
While the setting of the wedding was a backdrop of warm marble, color was added with vibrant blooms. For the ceremony in the round, the circular chuppah was covered with peach, coral, and green flowers and an abundance of greenery from all sides. Cocktail hour boasted statement pieces with anthurium, orchids, lotus pods and flowers, dahlias, ranunculus, Japanese anemones, and roses. On the reception tables, low arrangements of peach roses and ranunculus, vibrant coral and persimmon dahlias, roses, and anemones, pale green lisianthus and hellebores, and deep plum-colored ranunculus mixed with greenery, including ferns and ruscus. Fresh fruit and hand-painted gold were incorporated to add dimension and symbolism. A mix of taper candles and votives illuminated the storied space, with gold accents on everything from the chairs to the monogrammed napkin rings to the menus to the tabletop, further adding to the warm glow. And an organic installation of assorted greenery dripped overhead, while underfoot, the dancefloor was covered with a design inspired by an aerial view of manicured gardens.
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[field title=”Wedding Cake”]
The three-tier fondant-covered cake echoed the couple’s wedding crest thanks to gilded miniature fruits crafted in a marzipan style. Gold leaf adorned the base of each tier, with alternating layers of vanilla and chocolate cake with chocolate mousse filling inside.
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[field title=”Readings, Ceremony Music, Reception Songs”]
The bride’s uncle officiated the Western ceremony with Jewish influences, even though he had never attended an American wedding OR a Jewish wedding before! He studied up on the Jewish traditions most important to Ben and his family so that he could include them in a true cross-cultural gesture.
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[field title=”Special Detail #1″]
A custom crest spoke to elements of their families, featuring apples (Ben’s mother and her family grew up on orchards in Washington State), pears (the shape of the diamond in Ayesha’s engagement ring), and oranges (Ayesha’s father used to tell a favorite Indian story to Ayesha and her brother that was about oranges), which each spoke to important elements from their families. The crest’s symbolism came to fruition in the form of fruit trees on display behind the band.
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[field title=”Special Detail #2″]
The Jewish ceremony was discreetly live-streamed to family worldwide by Ayesha’s dad via Meta Ray-Ban glasses.
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[field title=”Special Detail #3″]
The late-night menu was influenced by the iconic city’s notable fare: pizza, pretzels, etc.
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[board_carousel title=”Couple Portraits”]




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[board_carousel title=”Reception”]















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[board_carousel title=”Wedding Weekend Events”]



























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Photography: Abigail Lewis | Cinematography: StopGoLove Films | Event Planning & Design: Lindsay Landman Events | Styling: Maisie-Kate Style | Floral Design: Lindsay Landman Events | Wedding Dress: Vera Wang | Cake: Lulu Cake Boutique | Invitations: Lindsay Landman Events | Catering: Pinch Food Design | Makeup: Flynn Pyykkonen | Hair: SB Beauty | Groom's Attire: Tom Ford | Wedding Venue: New York Public Library | Accomodations: Bryant Park Hotel | Baraat + Sangeet Location: The Bowery Hotel | Baraat Music: Rajpal Daffu | Henna: Henna by Hiral | Hindu Ceremony Music: Surati for Performing Arts | Lighting and AV: L&M Sound & Light | Mehendi Catering: TAGMO Catering | Mehendi Location: Bryant Park Hotel | Mehendi Outfit: Dolly J | Reception Dress: Danielle Frankel | Rentals: Drape Kings | Rentals: Luxe Event Rentals | Rentals: Bombshell graphics | Rentals: Party Rental LTD | Sangeet Bridesmaids' Attire: Punit Balana | Sangeet Catering: Hemant Mathur Catering | Sangeet DJ: DJ Paz | Sangeet Linens: Nuage Designs | Sangeet Outfits: Masaba | Sangeet Palm Reader: Raven | Sangeet Rentals: Broadway Party Rentals | Wedding Band: The Eleven | Welcome Party Location: Albert's | Welcome Party Outfit: Custom-made Sandra Mansour















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































