In the days before the wedding, homes change their rhythms. Women roll out thin sheets of lavash on wooden boards while elders pull thread through heirloom fabrics, the slow familiar clack of a sewing needle keeping time with the hum of conversation. The bride’s dress — sometimes a modern gown, sometimes a richly embroidered taraz passed down through generations — waits on a chair, its metalwork and beading catching the light. The air often carries the smell of spices and baking bread, and small hands sweep crumbs into hands that will soon be busy with so many cups to pour and toasts to make. Ceremonies vary by family and faith, and the mood is equal parts solemn and celebratory.
In a church the priest will call for blessings and symbols of union may be presented; in other settings vows are exchanged under a canopy of family faces and watchful grandparents. Whether the ritual is long or brief, there is frequently a moment when the community watches the couple together — sometimes crowned, sometimes led in a slow walk — and the sound of a single reed instrument, the duduk, or a drum punctuates that turning point. The meaning lies less in spectacle than in the tangible passing of care from one household to the next. The reception is where neighborhood and kinship compress into movement and song. A tamada or an appointed speaker lifts a glass and tells stories that stretch fussy cousins into laughter, and musicians cue dances like kochari that pull people from chairs by the hand.
Guests trade plates and small gifts, break bread with fingers stained by pomegranate and herbs, and join in spirited rounds of singing. There are small theatrical moments too: playful negotiations at the bride’s door, staged resistance and ransom, songs performed by teenagers and relatives that tease and praise in equal measure. After the music and the toasts, older guests make time for quiet counsel, and gifts of embroidered cloth, icons, or family keepsakes are given with gentle instruction. The newlyweds often spend the first days visiting elders, receiving whispered advice, and learning the household rhythms that marriage folds into. In these customs, whether practiced in the capital or a mountain village, the wedding is less a single event than a visible stitching of networks — hands, voices, recipes, and rituals — that will be called upon long after the last dance.