Info on the elaborate wedding in Ritz:
It was a $10 million fairy-tale wedding between a Singaporean bride and the son of an Indian tycoon.
Decked like a prince, 27-year-old Adarsh Garodia arrived - on a horse - at the Ritz Carlton Hotel on Tuesday evening to claim his 25-year-old bride Neha Didwania.
Some 2,000 guests were present to toast what has been dubbed the Wedding of the Year.
For the more than 300 guests from India, they had an all-expenses-paid trip to Singapore, including airfare, accommodation and food at the hotel for the past three days.
The couple met last December through a mutual friend.
"I love her. I mean she is the perfect woman that I've ever wanted. She is absolutely amazing," said the groom, who comes from Calcutta and is the only son of the Indian tycoon.
It was also love at first sight for the bride.
"His sincerity, his honesty and he's really hot. I mean he has a fantastic personality and we love each other to death. I met him twice and the second time I met him I knew he was the one," said the bride, who has a Masters from the London School of Economics.
Three months after they met, they were engaged.
A 6.5-carat engagement ring was what he gave her as a token of his love.
This was followed by a 10-carat diamond wedding band estimated to be worth at least a million dollars.
The generous gesture was kindly reciprocated by the bride's family who runs a worldwide steel supply chain with businesses all over the world.
Preparation for the wedding went like clockwork since April.
For the wedding planner, nothing was low-key. Only the best was the pre-requisite.
The family had insisted on the finest details, including having an all-white horse.
Shamini Suppiah, Ritz-Carlton's associate director for social events, said: "This is the largest-scale Indian wedding that we have had here, not only in terms of guest rooms but also in terms of the traditions and ceremonies that are taking place in the hotel. Some of the ceremonies are usually held at home but in this case, they are all held here."
One special ceremony was the Varmala where the bride and groom exchanged garlands for the first time.
It is as symbolic as when most couples traditionally exchange wedding rings.
Guests said it was an experience of a lifetime, a wedding almost fit for a king.
And the most visibly overwhelmed was the bride's mother whose eldest daughter will soon leave her to lead a new life in Calcutta, but not before the newly-weds' month-long honeymoon in Greece and Italy!