Indian Marriage Portfolio
The central wedding portfolio concept with story, gallery, venue, RSVP, and the shared local media showcase.
This folder contains multiple Indian wedding website directions: cinematic, floral, Bollywood, royal, media-first, experimental, and generator-led concepts. This index keeps them in one place with the same visual language already used across the project.
These are the easiest starting points if you want the broadest sense of the work: a media-rich version, a central portfolio page, and a dramatic Bollywood treatment.
Card copy is tuned to the filename and theme so the index feels like part of the project rather than a raw file listing.
The central wedding portfolio concept with story, gallery, venue, RSVP, and the shared local media showcase.
A dark, cinematic direction centered on local image and video assets with a premium presentation style.
A more theatrical cut with glamorous typography, spotlight energy, and entertainment-driven wedding storytelling.
A softer destination-wedding direction with floral romance, lighter surfaces, and now a shared local film section.
A palace-style concept built around ceremony, grandeur, and a more regal pacing across the page.
A heritage-led version tuned toward muhurtham timing, ritual structure, and a more grounded cultural framing.
A denser concept that leans into interactive website ideas while still carrying the wedding portfolio mood.
A cleaner alternate direction with a letter-like story layout and a shared local media strip.
A more marketing-forward wedding site with local gallery and video content replacing the original remote media.
An editorial generator-style concept with canvas-driven visuals and a shared local media section added to the composition.
An interactive wedding concept with a timeline, gallery, and locally hosted video cards replacing embedded remote trailers.
A decorative single-page wedding concept with local film cards now aligned to the shared project media set.
A large showcase page with wedding sections, interactive elements, and local video cards replacing placeholder embeds.