🇹🇷 Turkey · wedding
Kına gecesi — the henna night that turns a Turkish wedding into a two-day photo story
The night before the wedding, the bride cries on cue, her hands are painted with henna, and the women of two families produce more photos than the wedding itself.
A traditional Turkish wedding (*düğün*) plays out over two events: the **kına gecesi** (henna night) the evening before, and the wedding day itself. The kına gecesi is older, smaller, and produces more candid photos than the actual wedding for one simple reason: the men aren't there.
What happens on kına gecesi
The bride sits in the center of a circle of women — her mother, sisters, aunts, female cousins, future mother-in-law, and her closest friends. She wears a red velvet *bindallı* dress and a long red veil that covers her face. The women around her sing traditional songs (often regional folk songs, often very sad), candles in the bride's open palms are lit, and one or two women apply henna paste to her palms while everyone sings.
Tradition requires the bride to cry during the songs. The lyrics are typically about leaving the parents' home — they're designed to evoke grief at the loss of girlhood. The female relatives sing increasingly emotional verses until tears come. Then the future mother-in-law puts a gold coin or banknote into the bride's hennaed palm and closes her fingers around it. The crying stops. Everyone applauds. The mood shifts immediately to laughter, music, and food.
The candles, the henna, the red veil being lifted at the moment of the gold coin — every step of this is photographed. Modern brides typically have a videographer for the henna night too; the footage often becomes a separate short film distinct from the wedding video.
The wedding day
The next day is the official wedding (*nikah*). The legal civil ceremony at the *evlendirme dairesi* (marriage office) is brief, witnesses sign, and the bride and groom exchange rings. A larger reception follows, usually at a hotel or wedding hall (*düğün salonu*). The Turkish wedding reception is built around two key moments: the **takı** (gold-pinning) ceremony and the long open-floor dancing.
The takı is a Turkish wedding tradition where guests literally pin gold coins, gold bracelets, or banknotes to a ribbon worn diagonally across the couple's chests. Each guest is announced by name as they approach to pin. The MC calls it out — *"Mehmet Bey ve Ayşe Hanım, çeyrek altın!"* — and the couple turns to face the camera. Hundreds of guests over a couple of hours produces hundreds of formal portraits.
What guests photograph
- The bride's veiled silhouette during the henna songs - The henna application — close-up of the palms - The gold coin moment + lifted veil - The takı — each pinning is a separate guest-with-couple portrait - The first dance — usually a slow song followed by a *halay* (a line dance everyone joins)
Regional variation
A Black Sea wedding adds the *horon* (a fast, foot-stomping line dance with a *kemençe* fiddle). A southeastern Anatolian wedding adds a *davul-zurna* (drum-and-shawm) procession. An Aegean wedding might add the *zeybek* dance by male relatives. The henna night and the takı are constants; everything else is regional.
Citations & further reading
- Wikipedia (Turkish): [Türk düğünü](https://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%C3%BCrk_d%C3%BC%C4%9F%C3%BCn%C3%BC), [Kına gecesi](https://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C4%B1na_gecesi) - Wikipedia: [Turkish wedding traditions](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_wedding) - Turkish Ministry of Culture: *Geleneksel Türk düğün adetleri*
Frequently asked
What is kına gecesi?
The Turkish henna night, held the evening before the wedding. Female relatives gather around the bride to apply henna to her palms, sing traditional songs, and present her with gold coins from her future mother-in-law.
Why does the bride cry during kına gecesi?
The songs are designed to evoke grief at leaving her parents' home. Tradition says she should cry; the women sing increasingly emotional verses until tears come. Her future mother-in-law then closes her hand around a gold coin, the crying stops, and the mood shifts to celebration.
What is takı at a Turkish wedding?
The reception ceremony where guests pin gold coins, gold bracelets, or banknotes to a ribbon worn diagonally across the couple's chests. Each guest is announced by name; the MC calls out their gift live.
What is a halay?
A Turkish line dance that everyone joins, with guests linked at the little fingers, moving in a slow circle around the floor. It's the universal late-evening dance at Turkish weddings.
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