Planning a Space Wedding

A space wedding is a unique way to celebrate your big day. You can get creative with your theme and décor, and you have the option to choose a venue that offers plenty of room for everyone you want to invite.

When planning a space wedding, it’s important to consider how many guests you want to invite and whether you want a ceremony or reception. You’ll also need to decide if you want to host the event on your own property or work with a rental venue. Once you have a clear idea of what you want, you can start looking for venues.

You may be able to find a space for your wedding that’s already fully decorated and ready to go. However, it’s more likely that you’ll need to hire a wedding planner who has experience working with non-traditional spaces to plan and execute a successful event. This can be beneficial because the right planner will help you maximize the use of your space, find creative solutions to any challenges that may arise, and make sure all the details are taken care of so your wedding is flawless.

One of the most iconic space weddings was the 2003 marriage between Ekaterina Dmitrieva, a U.S. citizen of Russian descent, and cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko. The two married via a satellite video link, with Dmitrieva in her white dress at NASA headquarters and Malenchenko on the International Space Station. He wore his flight suit and added a bow tie to honor the occasion. The transmission was classified as a private family conference and was not broadcast on NASA television. The couple later celebrated their wedding in a church in Yaroslavl, Russia.

A company called Space Perspective is now offering couples the chance to say “I do” in outer space. The company’s carbon-neutral balloon can take you up to 60,000 feet, where you can see Earth’s third rock from above. However, the wait list for this once-in-a-lifetime experience is light-years long.

For those who can’t afford a full-fledged destination wedding in space, there are plenty of other options to give your event an interplanetary feel. For example, you could decorate your venue with space-themed decorations or stream videos of the Curiosity and Perseverance rovers in action on Mars. You can even add fun accessories like springy Martian antennae headbands and toy ray guns to your favors for an out-of-this-world look in your photos.

Of course, even these DIY options don’t quite match a space wedding in the literal sense. If you want to get hitched in the metaverse, a virtual reality where users can interact and create their own avatars, you’ll need to have a software engineer on hand—and that’s unlikely in any budget. But as this technology develops, the possibilities are boundless.