Kajal Aggarwal drops more unseen pics from pre-wedding festivities. See here
Kajal Aggarwal is now married to Gautam Kitchlu who even launched her as Mrs Kitchlu on Instagram after their dream marriage ceremony on October 30. Kajal has now been updating her followers with all of the pre-wedding festivities like satsang and gaur pooja that preceded the extremely guarded marriage ceremony at The Taj Mahal Palace lodge in Mumbai.
Kajal selected a easy but elegant crimson and white kurta-churidar by Varun Bahl for the Radha Krishna satsang. She has shared beautiful footage of herself posing within the lightweight ensemble. She had left her middle-parted hair open in tender curls and had tiny flowers adorning her tresses. She topped her simplistic look with only a bindi.
Kajal had worn a light-green Anita Dongre lehenga for the gaur pooja and the chunni ceremony forward of the marriage. It was held after her mehendi ceremony as she exhibits off her henna-decorated arms within the footage from the occasion. One of them additionally provides a more in-depth look of her engagement ring. “Gautam’s brother and brother-in-law performed the ritual,” Kajal instructed Vogue in an interview, whereas speaking concerning the Chunni ceremony.
“My side of the family is typical Punjabi, and my husband is half-Punjabi, half-Kashmiri. We wanted to make it very special and tried to incorporate both sides of our rituals and culture,” the actor added whereas speaking about how the assorted marriage ceremony rituals.
Also learn: Kajal Aggarwal on why she married Gautam Kitchlu amid pandemic: ‘We didn’t see one another, realised we wished to be collectively’
The two nonetheless have a South Indian connection, since Kajal has most of her work in Telugu cinema. They additionally carried out the Jeelakarra Bellam ceremony, seen in South Indian weddings, throughout their pheras. Sharing an image of the identical on Instagram, Kajal wrote, “In our Punjabi meets Kashmiri wedding, we just had to include #Jeelakarrabellam – a tribute to both Gautam and my individual relationships with South India! In a Telugu wedding, Jeelakarra Bellam signifies the union/marriage of the bride and the groom. Jeelakarra (cumin) and bellam (jaggery) are made into a thick paste and put on a tamalapaku (betel leaf). The bride and the groom put it on each other’s head while the purohit chants mantras from the Vedas. The bride and the groom look at each other only after this ceremony is completed and this auspicious ceremony signifies that the couple will stay together in bitter and sweet times.”
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