Entertainment

Made for Each Other – Vijay Deverakonda & Rashmika Mandanna’s Wedding Story, with Manyavar & Mohey by Their Side


Indian weddings have always meant more than two people saying “I do.” They’re about families gathering, rituals unfolding, and two lives choosing to move forward together.

But how couples dress for that moment? That story is changing.

When Vijay Deverakonda and Rashmika Mandanna step into their Manyavar & Mohey chapter after their much-loved Udaipur wedding, they aren’t just wearing celebration wear—they’re representing a generational shift.

And at the centre of that shift stands Manyavar, alongside its womenswear counterpart Mohey.

Their Udaipur wedding on 26 February 2026 beautifully blended Telugu and Kodava rituals. It was intimate, rooted, and emotionally rich—a ceremony that honoured families and heritage in equal measure.

But their new Manyavar & Mohey visual chapter tells a different story.

It’s about what happens when tradition isn’t a rulebook—but a foundation.

For years, Indian wedding fashion revolved around “twinning.” Same colours. Same embroidery language. Same fabric family.

Gen Z couples are gently rewriting that narrative.

Today’s rule? Coordinate energy, not embroidery.

Vijay’s look moves away from the classic heavy sherwani. Instead, he appears in a light grey and white Indo-Western set featuring a sheer textured overlay and architectural tailoring. The silhouette feels global, minimal, and sharp—shaadi-ready without being weighed down by excess.

Opposite him, Rashmika embraces drama—but on her own terms. Inspired by Mohey’s Bliss Sparkle Lehenga in striking red, her ensemble blends art silk with sequins, zari, cutdana, and zardozi work. It shimmers in motion, delivering impact without heaviness.

Nothing “matches.”
Yet everything aligns.

Her look brings the sparkle.
His brings the calm.
Together, they share a mood—not a colour swatch.

This generation doesn’t just ask, “Do we look good together?”
They ask, “Do I still look like myself?”

That shift shows up clearly in wedding fashion:

  • Less pressure to twin perfectly
  • More space for one partner to go maximal while the other stays minimal
  • Outfits designed for movement—reels, dance floors, candid joy
  • Re-wearable pieces styled beyond the wedding day

Manyavar has evolved with that change. Once known primarily for grand sherwanis and regal bandhgalas during the big-fat-wedding era, the brand now balances tradition with fusion silhouettes, breathable fabrics, and camera-ready detailing.

Mohey mirrors that shift for brides—offering sparkle-rich lehengas that feel light, fluid, and celebratory rather than overwhelming.

The wedding in Udaipur showed how deeply Vijay and Rashmika value family and ritual.

This new Manyavar & Mohey chapter shows how confidently they embrace personal expression.

They honour tradition at the mandap.
They own individuality in their style.

And that balance is what makes them feel undeniably made for each other—even when they’re not matching.

Manyavar isn’t changing what a shaadi means.
It’s simply redefining how modern couples show up in it.


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