Cambodian Wedding, Philadelphia, PA, 1985
It is customary for a bride to show off her wealth in many Asian cultures by changing her dress many times during the wedding day. After the traditional home ceremony, Taing Ly puts on a western bridal gown, which she wears to the banquet in a Chinese restaurant.
Katrina Thomas's notes: The Cambodians I photographed are newly arrived refugees, having fled the communist Khmer Rouge after the fall of Phnom Penh in 1975. Many came without their families, who had been killed or had remained to guard their properties. In the U.S. Khmer weddings usually take place on a single day. I photographed four, three on a single day, one lasting two days. All are abbreviated when compared to those in the home country. With little guidance, they try to keep traditions for a proper celebration but without their native substances or their own foods. Rather than falling in love, all the couples were matched by others and most weddings are conducted by their own people without the licenses to do so legally but able to marry them in the eyes of their own community.
Thomas, Katrina (photographer)
1985
1 photograph : black-and-white
reformatted digital
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Philadelphia--Philadelphia
BMC-M59
Photographer's categories: Bride , Bridal apparel , Bridal attendants
BMC-M59_16-16