Core Responsibilities
Concept & Mood Board Creation: Translating a couple’s vague ideas ("romantic but modern," "royal traditional," or "minimalist chic") into concrete visual concepts, color palettes, and digital or physical mood boards.
Spatial Planning & Floor Plans: Designing the layout of the venue. This includes mapping out where the stage, mandap, or altar will sit, positioning lounges, and ensuring the lighting complements the architecture of the space.
Sourcing & Vendor Curation: Scouting and managing specialized visual vendors. A designer curates the specific florists, fabricators, lighting technicians, furniture rental companies, and printers who can execute the vision.
Material & Decor Selection: Choosing every physical element guests see and touch—from massive floral installations and custom-built entryways down to the texture of the linens, the typography on the menus, and the style of the cutlery.
On-Site Execution & Styling: On the day of the event, the designer acts as an art director on the floor, managing the production crew as they build the sets, adjust the lighting cues, and style the final details before guests arrive.
Essential Skill Set
To thrive as a wedding designer, an individual needs a mix of artistic instinct and structural production knowledge:
Spatial Awareness & 3D Visualization: The ability to look at an empty ballroom or raw outdoor lawn and visualize scale, structural needs, and guest flow. Proficiency in software like CAD, SketchUp, or Photoshop is increasingly standard.
Deep Knowledge of Production: Understanding what it takes to actually build a concept. This means knowing about trussing, lighting physics, fabric weights, and how weather affects outdoor floral structures.
Resourcefulness & Problem Solving: When a specific flower variety doesn't arrive or a custom backdrop structure fails to fit through the venue doors, a designer must think on their feet to pivot without compromising the look.
Pay: ₹9,146.77 - ₹46,329.32 per month
Benefits:
Work Location: In person