An engagement or ring ceremony is a strange design brief: it needs to feel like a real event, not a preview, but it also shouldn't try to out-do the wedding that's coming later. Here's how we think about that balance.
Depending on the family and region, this event goes by different names — roka (a North Indian tradition marking the informal start of the wedding process), sagai or a straightforward ring ceremony. Some families keep it small and home-based; others treat it as a full event with 100+ guests. Before we design anything, we ask which version this is, because the decor scale should match.
More than any other pre-wedding event, roka and ring ceremonies happen at home almost as often as at a venue. That changes our approach completely — home setups need to work with existing furniture and room proportions rather than a blank banquet floor, and we usually lean on drape, florals and lighting rather than large rented structures that wouldn't fit or make sense in a living room.
Ask any family what stuck with them from their ring ceremony, and it's rarely the backdrop — it's the small rituals: the exchange itself, the first photos as an engaged couple, grandparents' reactions. We design the decor to support those moments rather than compete with them, which is really the throughline for this entire event: understated elegance, not a smaller wedding.
We'll design a setup that feels intentional and elegant — sized right for your guest list and venue.
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