Wedding Diaries

This traditional Parsi wedding in Mumbai carried ritual and revelry to a historic racecourse

For the Zoroastrian wedding ceremony, Sanaya Irani wore a custom Ashdeen ivory gara sari while Varaz Printer opted for a Kaizad Wadia ivory dagli

wedding in Mumbai

For the Zoroastrian wedding, the Members’ Pavilion at the Royal Western India Turf Club had everything they were looking for. “It’s the heritage, the scale, the rain trees, the old-world charm,” Irani says. “You feel transported, but you’re still right in the middle of the city.” Irani wore a custom Ashdeen ivory gara sari and veil, hand-embroidered with French knots that took over 3,500 hours. “I wanted something delicate, traditional, but still modern,” she says. Printer complemented her in a custom Kaizad Wadia ivory dagli, finished with French knot embroidery on the collar and cuffs to mirror her sari, along with a traditional pheta and a pomegranate brooch.

“That transition from ‘me’ to ‘we’ was incredibly powerful,” Irani says, referring to the ritual during their traditional ceremony where rice is thrown across a cloth separating the couple, before it’s lifted. “It really felt like the beginning of our life together.” After the ceremony, Belgian boogie band Midnight Avenue took the wedding party to the dance floor.

“Our vision for the day was ethereal and timeless,” shares Irani. “Varaz and I love things that are built to last, that have character and charm. We wanted our wedding to feel as lasting as our love for each other and our people.”