Wedding Diaries

This wedding in New Delhi was a beautiful blend of Punjabi and Kashmiri Pandit traditions

Asna Oberoi and Vedant Jailkhani’s wedding brought together family-led rituals and personalised elements

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The Allied

When it came to planning the wedding, practicality played an early role. Oberoi comes from a large joint family, while Jailkhani’s family is smaller and more intimate. Although Oberoi had once liked the idea of a destination wedding, the reality of hosting hundreds of relatives made New Delhi the obvious choice. “I had seen hosts at destination weddings completely exhausted,” she says. “I knew I needed rest to actually enjoy my wedding.” This allowed events to be spaced out, rest to be protected and each celebration to stand on its own.

Oberoi led the creative vision herself, building mood boards for each event and shaping the aesthetic language from the ground up. “Years of working in marketing taught me how to think in experiences,” she says. “This felt like the most personal version of that.” Execution came together with planners Karmaa by Aman Paul, who translated her vision across venues and formats.

The invitations became the first expression of that thinking. Designed with The Nureh Project, each card subtly reflected the mood of its event rather than prescribing a dress code. One detail mattered deeply to Jailkhani: his two dogs, a German Shepherd and a Husky, who couldn’t attend the celebrations. They were illustrated into the save-the-date, seated inside a shikara, ensuring they were present in spirit from the very beginning.

Honouring both cultures was central to the planning. Oberoi comes from a Punjabi Hindu household, while Jailkhani’s family follows Kashmiri Pandit traditions, with Punjabi roots on his mother’s side. One of the most significant gestures came months before the wedding when Oberoi underwent a conch piercing to wear the Kashmiri dejhoor. “It wasn’t something I wanted to do performatively,” she says. “Wearing the dejhoor felt like a physical way of honouring Vedant’s heritage and the family I was becoming part of.” On the wedding day, she wore the dejhoor tied with a red thread by her mother, to be later replaced with a gold chain once she entered Jailkhani’s home.

The bridal shower came first, held at her grandmother’s home. She wore a pearl-work cape gown by House of Masaba. “It was flowy, feminine and surprisingly comfortable, yet had the perfect amount of drama to mark the beginning of the festivities.” Custom hair accessories by HairDrama Co. featured cascading pearl chains with a subtle “Bride” detail woven in. Her shoes were custom-made by Pace Shoes India, designed during a chance pop-up visit in New Delhi. The backyard was transformed with clear balloons filled with pearls, acrylic hangings engraved with personal dates and quotes and a rose-petal shower by her sisters and cousins, a family ritual that has since become tradition.