CRAWFORD, Texas (CNN) --
Jenna Bush and Henry Hager say "I do" on Saturday. "We're mighty blessed," President Bush said.
1 of 2more photos » Jenna, 26, married Henry Hager, the son of a well-connected Virginia Republican.
"The wedding was spectacular. It was all we could have hoped for," the president said Sunday before boarding Air Force One.
"We're mighty blessed."
Wearing a white silk organza Oscar de la Renta gown, the bride stood with the groom before a beige-colored cross and altar made of Texas limestone. See pictures from the wedding »
The White House declined to release many details of the festivities, citing the family's wish for privacy.
Bush family friend Rev. Kirbyjon Caldwell of Houston officiated as the couple exchanged wedding vows in front of some 200 family members and friends.
Wedding facts
Bride: Jenna Welch Bush
Groom: Henry Chase Hager
Place: President Bush's Prairie Chapel Ranch, Crawford, Texas
Guests: More than 200 friends and relatives
Attendants: 14 women known as members of the "house party," not bridesmaids
Bride's gown designer: Oscar de la Renta
Ring: The diamond, a Hager family heirloom, reset in a ring that also features sapphires
Maid of Honor: Jenna's twin sister, Barbara
Ceremony site: At a cross made of beige Texas limestone erected near a lake on the ranch
Engagement: August 15, 2007, at Acadia National Park in Maine
Source: The Associated Press
Bush said the sun set over the lake as his daughter and Hager exchanged vows. More wedding details »
The guests arrived in five coach buses and were waved through the ranch's checkpoint around 7 p.m.
The decor and the wedding party -- known in Texas as the "house party" -- were dressed in colors that reflected the hues of the landscape, including native Texas wildflowers: greens, blues, yellows and lavenders, the White House said.
Jenna's 14 women attendants wore chiffon dresses by Dallas designer Lela Rose, while the 14 men wore suits and light blue ties.
Afterwards, under a tent nestled in a thick cluster of trees, the celebration included dinner and dancing to the music of the Motown-style band, the Tyrone Smith Review, the White House said.
A CNN camera crew positioned miles from the wedding site saw a glimpse of the white tent, illuminated with what appeared to be strings of lights hanging from the ceiling.
The president and the bride picked "You Are So Beautiful" for their father-daughter dance, band leader Tyrone Smith of Nashville, Tennessee. told The Associated Press. Smith and his 10-piece party band, The Tyrone Smith Revue, was asked to do "Lovin' in My Baby's Eyes" by Taj Mahal for the newlyweds' first dance.
The AP reported the festivities began Friday with a bridal lunch, rehearsal dinner and post-rehearsal dinner celebration in Salado, a tiny tourist village, which used to be a stagecoach stop. Jenna, her sister and the first lady were in Salado, more than an hour's drive south of Crawford, all day Friday and the president arrived in the evening by motorcade.
"I had to face some very difficult spending decisions, and I've had to conduct sensitive diplomacy. That's called planning for a wedding," Bush told the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce on March 12.
Jenna Bush told CNN's Larry King on April 24 that the wedding would include "all relatives, our families, really, kind of big. So it's half-family and then half very close friends."
Not all of her friends were expected to be on hand though.
"The only information that I've received is that there are a number of Jenna's close friends who are not being invited to this wedding because, according to them, she would be afraid of their behavior," Doug Wead said.
Wead is a former aide to President George H.W. Bush and author of "All the Presidents' Children."
He says that unlike the pageantry of White House weddings past, such as Tricia Nixon's in 1971, the Texas ceremony would take place away from the media spotlight.
"The Bushes are very private. It's a time of war; it's at a time of economic struggle. ... And this president has high negatives right now. ... It's much more of a low-key event," Wead said. Listen to President Bush's radio address on his daughter's wedding »
Wead said another consideration for the wedding's location is "they know that they don't own the White House, that they can't go back.
"It will belong to Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton or John McCain. ... But [Jenna and Henry] will always have Crawford. They won't even maybe have Kennebunkport; that hasn't been decided yet. ... But Crawford, Jenna and Henry can walk through the moonlight and hold hands and say, 'This is where we were married,' and it will always be theirs," Wead added.
The first lady's office kept a tight lid on specifics. But the bride did reveal dress details to Vogue magazine, describing her gown as an Oscar de la Renta creation made of organza with embroidery and beading. Watch as the first lady details the wedding plans »
Earlier this month, first lady Laura Bush already started joking about names for possible grandchildren.
"George or Georgia ... Georgina. Georgette," she said.