<p>After Bollywood the DeepVeer extravaganza, it’s the turn of Kannada moviedom to witness the most happening wedding of the year.</p>.<p>The much-in-love Diganth Manchale and Aindrita Ray are tying the knot on December 12, after 10 years of courtship. The wedding will take place at Discovery Village, a resort near Nandi Hills.</p>.<p>Diganth visited the Paresh Lamba Signatures store on MG Road on Saturday for his final<br />attire fitting, and Metrolife was there too.</p>.<p>Choosing Lamba to design his outfit was no overnight decision: Diganth says he made it a decade ago when he was a model. </p>.<p>“I walked the ramp for Paresh a lot of times in the past, and whenever I thought of getting married, I knew I would go to him for my wedding outfit,” he says.</p>.<p>Diganth will wear a white cotton Lyrca kurta-pyjama and complete his look with a raw silk, block-printed Nehru jacket.</p>.<p>Aindrita, on the other hand, will wear an ensemble designed by Mumbai-based designer Rocky S.</p>.<p>“Since Aindrita is Bengali, we are having a Bengali-style wedding. In fact, my wedding outfit has a bit of Bengali influence to it. The dress code for the wedding is pastels and white, so all our friends and relatives will be seen in these colours,” says Diganth.</p>.<p>The couple has chosen a vegetarian menu, with the bride’s side doing the hosting.</p>.<p>Popular actors Sudeep, Darshan, Yash, Puneeth Rajkumar, Shivaraj Kumar and Rakshit Shetty will be part of the celebrations.</p>.<p>Diganth expects 300 to 400 people for the wedding, which will be followed by a cocktail party on December 15 at Bang, The Ritz-Carlton. Actors from Bollywood, such as Arbaaz Khan, are on the guest list there.</p>.<p>Diganth promises good music at the event. He hasn’t felt wedding jitters yet, and that’s because he has been “too busy”.</p>.<p>“I have seen a lot of Kannada-style weddings, so a Bengali wedding would be something new for everyone in my family. My cousins and relatives are already looking forward to the ‘ulu dhwani’ (high pitched loud vocal sound), without which a Bengali wedding is incomplete,” he says.</p>.<p>Working with Diganth has been smooth, says Lamba. “It took us 10 minutes to decide what he was going to wear. Aindrita and Didanth gave me a brief of what they looking for and there it was, all done,” he explains. Diganth’s conical headgear is designed in Kolkata.</p>
<p>After Bollywood the DeepVeer extravaganza, it’s the turn of Kannada moviedom to witness the most happening wedding of the year.</p>.<p>The much-in-love Diganth Manchale and Aindrita Ray are tying the knot on December 12, after 10 years of courtship. The wedding will take place at Discovery Village, a resort near Nandi Hills.</p>.<p>Diganth visited the Paresh Lamba Signatures store on MG Road on Saturday for his final<br />attire fitting, and Metrolife was there too.</p>.<p>Choosing Lamba to design his outfit was no overnight decision: Diganth says he made it a decade ago when he was a model. </p>.<p>“I walked the ramp for Paresh a lot of times in the past, and whenever I thought of getting married, I knew I would go to him for my wedding outfit,” he says.</p>.<p>Diganth will wear a white cotton Lyrca kurta-pyjama and complete his look with a raw silk, block-printed Nehru jacket.</p>.<p>Aindrita, on the other hand, will wear an ensemble designed by Mumbai-based designer Rocky S.</p>.<p>“Since Aindrita is Bengali, we are having a Bengali-style wedding. In fact, my wedding outfit has a bit of Bengali influence to it. The dress code for the wedding is pastels and white, so all our friends and relatives will be seen in these colours,” says Diganth.</p>.<p>The couple has chosen a vegetarian menu, with the bride’s side doing the hosting.</p>.<p>Popular actors Sudeep, Darshan, Yash, Puneeth Rajkumar, Shivaraj Kumar and Rakshit Shetty will be part of the celebrations.</p>.<p>Diganth expects 300 to 400 people for the wedding, which will be followed by a cocktail party on December 15 at Bang, The Ritz-Carlton. Actors from Bollywood, such as Arbaaz Khan, are on the guest list there.</p>.<p>Diganth promises good music at the event. He hasn’t felt wedding jitters yet, and that’s because he has been “too busy”.</p>.<p>“I have seen a lot of Kannada-style weddings, so a Bengali wedding would be something new for everyone in my family. My cousins and relatives are already looking forward to the ‘ulu dhwani’ (high pitched loud vocal sound), without which a Bengali wedding is incomplete,” he says.</p>.<p>Working with Diganth has been smooth, says Lamba. “It took us 10 minutes to decide what he was going to wear. Aindrita and Didanth gave me a brief of what they looking for and there it was, all done,” he explains. Diganth’s conical headgear is designed in Kolkata.</p>