Alison Goldberg and Gregory Kalikow
The bride is a lawyer; the groom is an executive with a real estate development and management group.
An Indy 500 racer finally catches up to his high school crush.
No matter what, a couple never misses morning coffee and a yearly trip to Coney Island.
Orange is the new black tie, and when the bride and groom seem to value your present more than your presence.
The couple met in 2010 when they were at the same bar to commiserate over a loss by their alma mater’s basketball team.
The bride is a lawyer; the groom is an executive with a real estate development and management group.
The bride and groom each received a dental degree from New York University, where they met.
The bride is an executive at Hill & Knowlton Strategies, a public relations firm; the groom is the director for public-private partnerships at Medgar Evers College.
The couple lives in Abu Dhabi, where the groom is a consultant on Middle East affairs for a cybersecurity company.
The bride is a graphic designer; the groom is a media reporter for Politico.
Weddings in Iran have long been an over-the-top affair with families spending thousands of dollars to celebrate a union. But now some couples are splurging on an entirely different sort of nuptial celebration: a divorce party.
The barricaded areas in the financial district have served as a backdrop for wedding and graduation photos, as young Hong Kongers intertwine their personal lives with the historical significance of the protests.
Held shortly after a month of ready-to-wear presentations conclude in Paris, Bridal Week in New York City is a relative bastion of traditionalism.
The Vows section of The Times publishes an occasional series of readers’ wedding-related Instagram photos, called Wedding Album. This month’s theme is one-of-a-kind wedding cakes.
Sage Sohier’s photos of same-sex couples were inspired, in part, by her father — who never admitted he was gay despite having lived with boyfriends.
After a federal inquiry in Rhode Island turned the workplace of their repetitive jobs upside down, a couple with intellectual disabilities is marrying, learning to budget and adjusting to a new freedom.
Clarksville, Tenn., might be fun for single women. We look at other places where, according to research, the odds are good for both sexes.
Valerie and Clark Tate’s wedding took place in 2000, and while they “unhitched” in 2007, they remain legally married, share a home and are raising their son together.
We are looking for couples who have split up and are willing to talk about how their lives have changed and what they have learned.
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