In the bustling heart of Bologna, the central train station was alive with motion— two souls stood distinctly apart: F and G. They had just arrived from their cherished homelands, she from Puglia and he from the sun-drenched coasts of Sicily. It was all but a fleeting meeting at an intersection of life. They were both headed elsewhere as is the case of passengers in a train station
Days turned into weeks, and their coonversation grew longer, their complicity stronger and their love for each other deepened, rooted in shared moments and the beauty of their differences. One of the moving wedding vows spoken was when during their civil ceremony she said "G, I love you in the most normal of ways." I love you in the simplicity of waking up next to you, in the laughter we share over breakfast, in the way our hands fit perfectly together as we walk. It’s the everyday love—no grand gestures, just us—every single day filled with love."He understood how emotional his wife to be was at that moment and he proceeded to lighten the moment by reading her a funny little poem totally in ryhme, which was nonetheless meaningful.
And so it was that the meeting of two soulmates in a bustling train station became a foundational tale of love. It was a love neither loud nor ostentatious but reminding them both everyday that extraordinary exists in the most normal of moments." They chose to marry in one of the most beautiful locations ever conceded by the Town hall of Verona..."The Cappella dei Notai" The Notaries' Chapel is the most prestigious room in the ancient Palace of the City of Verona, also called the Palace of Reason. The majestic building located in the southeast corner of the ancient Roman forum, between Piazza delle Erbe and Piazza dei Signori, was built in the last years of the 12th century to house the new magistracies of the Municipality. It consists of four communicating rooms covered with ribbed vaults set on Gothic arches, decorated with large paintings on canvas in the form of lunettes and oval paintings fixed to the vaults, made by Veronese artists Alessandro Marchesini, Giambattista Bellotti, Santo Prunati and Frenchman Louis Dorigny at the turn of the 18th century. Also valuable is the nineteenth-century manufactured wall covering that decorates the wall.
Their celebration continued in another beautiful hillside location, a vineyard in the east side of Verona which also offers hospitality to small numbers. After a poolside aperitif the party moved to an imperial table amongst the vineyards decorated with candles and ivy and with mellow background music intervalled by laughter and speeches...
Memories we made..for all!.
