This Hindu-Jewish wedding in Mumbai gave each tradition its own space
From a customised wedding newspaper to interactive mehendi stations, Tanisha Narang and Noah London's wedding was built around detail and pacing

Tanisha Narang and Noah London planned a wedding in Mumbai that allowed two cultural lineages to exist side by side without being compressed into a single moment. Spread across multiple days, the celebrations were paced carefully, with each ceremony given its own rhythm and space.
Mumbai is the city Narang calls home, where friends and family could gather easily from Israel, the United States, Europe and across India. Working with Niche Events, the couple approached the planning as a continued experience for everyone involved. “We wanted a location that felt like a true merging of our worlds,” Narang says.
The celebrations began at the Trident with a rooftop mehendi overlooking the Queen’s Necklace. The setting was designed by House of Vivaah as a garden-like and open, with woven baskets, bright florals and informal seating that encouraged guests to move through the space. Violinist Daniella Alphonso played through the afternoon while guests drifted between interactive stations, including tarot reading, candle-making, perfume blending and potli-making. For the mehendi, Narang wore Opus, while London wore a custom-made Kora ensemble. Hair and makeup for the celebrations were handled by Mehera Kolah, with hair by Kaushal.
The Hindu wedding ceremony took place the next morning in the same venue, transformed again. Soft pinks filled the space, paired with natural light and live flute music. Guests were welcomed with a customised wedding newspaper, The London Times, filled with crossword puzzles, stories and personal notes. Narang describes the morning as calm and reflective. “We woke up ready to take the pheras to the sound of a live flute,” she says. For the ceremony, Narang wore Shlok, while London was dressed in a custom-made Kora look.
That evening, the atmosphere shifted completely. The ballroom was reworked for the sangeet, with dramatic lighting and performance-led energy, with music by DJ Prasad. Where the morning focused on ritual, the night leaned toward celebration.
The Jewish ceremony took place the following day and was the most minimal of the celebrations. The palette stayed within baby blues, whites and candlelight. Each ritual unfolded in sequence: the signing of the ketubah, the bedeken, the hakafot in which Narang circled London seven times, and the sharing of wine during kiddushin. Wrapped in a tallit, the couple received the birkat kohanim before London broke the glass beneath his foot. Their rabbi had travelled from the United States to officiate. Narang chose a Galia Lahav gown, which she finalised immediately during her fitting, while London was dressed in a custom-made Alan David ensemble.
The reception that followed was kept intentionally relaxed. Candlelit and informal, it centred live music and conversation rather than programming. Class Apart Band and DJ Prasad's music filled the evening as people got up on their feet to dance the night away.
Narang and London met during their sophomore year at Syracuse University, introduced by mutual friends. What was expected to be a brief encounter extended into an all-night conversation that ended around 5 am. Their relationship grew stronger across cities and time zones, with Narang building her career in e-commerce and brand management and London working in commercial property insurance.
The proposal followed the same preference for privacy. London told Narang they were travelling upstate for his grandfather’s birthday. Instead, he brought her to his family’s private golf course, where he proposed beside a lake on May 13, at the 13th hole. “No flash mobs. No crowd,” Narang says. “Just us.”
Looking back at their wedding in Mumbai, the moments that stand out come from across the wedding rather than a single event: the morning pheras, the bedeken, the sangeet and watching guests experience both traditions over multiple days. Asked if she would change anything, her answer is brief. “No,” she says.



