It’s wild to think that Jennifer Lopez got married a few years ago, yet her wedding is still making the rounds online like it happened yesterday. Every few months, it resurfaces on TikTok wedding edits or “iconic celebrity weddings” lists—and honestly, it deserves the spotlight.
The ceremony was a masterclass in elegance and personal storytelling. J.Lo didn’t just steal the day — she stole the internet for weeks. The fashion, the speeches, the family moments… everything felt intentional and beautifully curated .
But you know what still stands out the most?
The thoughtful ideas the couple brought to life.
They were heart-warming, mind-blowing, and totally inspiring—even now, years later.
Should we start with Ben’s unforgettable speech—yes, the one inspired by his movie Live By Night—or the couple’s deeply personal decision to have their five children lead the bride down the aisle?
Some wedding moments are trends.
This one became a blueprint.

Behold, it was a sight.
But, of course, we’re not here to discuss Jlo. We’re here to take some pages from her playbook – creating your own amazing wedding visuals.
How can you do that?
Let’s find out.
1. Create a wedding trailer
Modern wedding trailers often include aerial drone shots, 4K slow-motion sequences, and cinematic LUT color grading.
Many couples also request vertical trailers formatted for TikTok and Instagram Reels since short-form wedding edits now go viral faster than traditional videos.
Lots of people would love to watch and relive your wedding day for years to come. A great way to create amazing content is with wedding trailers.
Like a movie trailer, your wedding trailer should feature the biggest moments of the day, the highlights of major activities, and the standout dialogues that strike you the most.
To give your trailer a bit of that movie-like glamour, you can include music, video effect, commentary, or voice over.
Your choice of music or sound in different moments should be determined by the actions and dialogues happening in each moment.
For example, in the case of Jlo’s wedding, she had “The Things We’ve Handed Down” – a song about the mystery of children – playing in the background as she walked down the aisle.
That song befitted the action happening in that moment because Lopez was preceded on the walk by her children.
As for the commentary in the clip, you can use dialogues between family and friends or through natural ceremony moments like the “I dos.”
Finally, you can have your wedding videographer order the clips chronologically and in a manner that emphasizes your feelings at different times.
2. Create a wedding hashtag and have every guest use the hashtag on social media
Wedding hashtags are fast becoming a trend, aren’t they? Just this week alone, I’ve seen hashtags like #JaneGotHitched, #HappilyEverCarol, and many more on Instagram.
These hashtags are great, no doubt. But why stop there? Why not leverage them in making a nice wedding visual?
Let me show you how
When handing out your wedding invite, ring it in the ears of guests that they should kindly use your hashtag when posting pictures and videos from the event on their social media pages.
Now, after the event, go to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok and use your wedding hashtag to search for videos and pictures of your ceremony taken by your guests.
Save and edit these contents in the order of events for the day and then turn them into one big video collage.
As a finishing touch, you can then add a lovely music or voiceover that tells a story of you and yours.
TikTok’s wedding hashtag challenges are now a major trend.
Encourage guests to upload short clips using the hashtag — these often get picked up by local trends, boosting visibility and making it easier to compile guest POV footage.
3. Interview your Exes
Sadly, this one may not work for everyone.
But for those who’re still on good terms with their ex-lovers, making a video documentary of exes might make one hell of a wedding visual.
In the interview, your respective exes may share what it feels like to date each of you.
They may burst into a wish mode and say some nice wishes for your marriage.
Or perhaps they may give some words of advice to the groom or bride-to-be.
Imagine creating this kind of video and showing it to your guests at the reception. What a moment that would be.
This trend, now called “The Ex Test,” has blown up on TikTok and YouTube Shorts, with many couples using it for comedic effect.
4. Make a reception video
A video of the reception is one you do to relive your celebrations in years to come.
Since reception is where the dancing, singing, and jubilations happen, it makes sense to have a documentary video of the whole event unfolding.

Have your wedding videographer select and edit note-worthy moments at the reception and forge them into a standout reception video.
Reception highlight reels are now often edited in multiple formats — widescreen for YouTube and vertical for social. Adding subtle AI-enhanced audio cleanup helps ensure speeches and toasts sound crisp and high-quality.
5. Pick a funny moment and make a big deal of it
I saw a video on Instagram where the groom was asked to prostrate in front of the stairs as the bride walked down the aisle.
It was such a hilarious moment.
I saw another on Facebook where the groom tucked his head under the bride’s gown and stayed like that for minutes.
Only God knew what he was doing down there. (Winks).
There was another hilarious one on TikTok where the bride ran around the reception room the moment the groom kissed her.
My point being?
Come up with a funny and memorable idea and make a video of it.
In years to come, when you remember the action of the day, you’ll need the video to relive the memory.
Wedding comedy beats’ have become a massive social trend, with couples planning one deliberate comedic moment for viral potential. Think slow-mo reactions, staged pranks, or groom-and-groomsmen “entrance dances.
6. Have a cinematic wedding video
Cinematic wedding videos are always hit because they are one of a kind.
They’re the type of videos you see in movie scenes where the camera follows the groom’s lips as he’s about to plant a kiss on his bride.
Or the type you see where a teardrop from the bride feels like a flashing diamond from the sky.
In simple terms, cinematic wedding videos are those videos created in the language of a cinema.
As such, they tend to cost more money.
These videos are more like an artistic mini movie rather than a compilation of clips and moments.
They are what you would call a Hollywood-esque wedding scene.
The film is shot in high-quality short clips to tell a certain story.
Unlike trailer videos that mumble numerous unrelating moments together, a cinematic video tells a particular story using captivating visual effects.
The storyline?
The storyline in a cinematic video can be anything you wish for it to be.
It could be a story about the bride’s family’s emotions on the day or a story about the groom’s friends’ outfits. It could be anything.
Cinematic wedding films now often include:
- 4K or 8K footage
- Drone flyovers
- Voiceover storytelling
- “First look” slow-motion sequences
- Personalized soundtrack licensing**
Couples also request AI-enhanced stabilization and seamless color grading.
7. Make room for the ones you’ve lost
Is there someone who’s supposed to be at your wedding but who can’t because they’ve passed away?
This is your chance to honour their memory and plant their presence forever on your big day.
Honour them by including clips of them in your video collage, trailer, or other videos of the day.

For example, you can add a photo or clip of a deceased uncle along with the rest of the family in one of your wedding videos.
Many couples now use AI-powered photo restoration to bring old photos of late loved ones back to life in higher quality before including them in tribute montages.
8. Make a music video
Yes, it’s your wedding day, but what’s stopping you from turning it into an MTV-worthy visual?
Many a time, we see wedding scenes make it to TV screens in the form of music videos.
Mariah Carey’s ‘We Belong Together,’ Beyonce’s ‘Best Thing I Never Had,’ Cardi B’s ‘Be Careful,’ and Nicki Minaj’s ‘Moment 4 Life’ are some of the few examples that come to mind.
Why not create something similar?
Depending on how you’re feeling, you may choose to recreate your favourite music video or have a videographer create your own unique video to a song that fits the day.
When you’re done, share the video across your social media pages, and tag the artist.
Who knows, you just might bag a repost.
Imagine Cardi B reposting your wedding video – hmmm, that would be huge.
By the way, if you’re serious about bagging a celebrity repost, I’d advise you do it on Instagram.
That app – the second most popular (65%) social media platform for video efforts – is notorious for virality.
Wedding music videos styled after popular TikTok trends are extremely popular.
Some couples recreate iconic scenes from music videos (“Love Story,” “Just the Two of Us,” etc.) and release them as shareable short-form content.
9. Something about your love journey
Not everyone comes to a wedding for a sip of wine or a taste of the cake.
Some people actually come to get a glimpse of your love story.

How you met, how you survived the tough days, how you had your first kiss, who said I’m sorry first, what the groom/bride is like in a relationship, blah blah blah.
Make it worth their time by sharing a video documentary of your love story.
You can have it in the form of an interview where a close friend throws numerous questions at you and yours.
In the end, you’ll have a short clip that shows friends and family a side of you they had never seen.
Imagine going to your friend’s party and finding out he and his wife-to-be had their first kiss in your basement the night of your birthday party.
How hilarious would that be?
Story-driven “relationship timelines” are trending, especially when combined with voiceovers or documentary-style interviews with friends and family.
10. Make a video of the proposal
Proposals are also a big part of wedding celebrations.
Although they happen long before the actual wedding, they’re still worthy of being captured.
Also, considering the cinematic theatrics that characterises wedding proposals, it makes a lot of sense to capture the entire moment leading to the groom popping the question.
That said, when it comes to proposal videos, you have two options.
Firstly, you can record the surprise by setting up cameras beforehand or ask invited observers to help you capture the moment with their smartphones.
Secondly, you can return to the proposal site to re-enact the moment and then film it in a more appropriate fashion.
Recreated proposal scenes are now often filmed in 4K with cinematic lighting.
Many couples also request a vertical proposal edit for sharing on social media — especially TikTok and Instagram Reels.
11. Guest Introduction
Get a message across to everyone you expect to attend your wedding, and ask them to make a short video introducing themselves, their relationship with you, and any word of advice or encouragement on the new journey.
Please don’t forget to encourage a bit of humour.
It’s a wedding guest introduction video, not a virtual interview.
Compile these clips and forge them into one big video shoot.
On D-Day, have the video played at the reception and watch people smile from ear to ear.
It’s becoming common for guests to submit their introductions as short vertical clips, which makes for a great social montage and boosts engagement.
12. Do one for the culture
The digital age is making many of us forget about our cultural values.
People now choose wedding ceremony ideas from Instagram and YouTube without even minding whether such ideas align with their culture.
To be fair, it isn’t a bad idea. But sometimes, doing one for the culture makes sense, too.

And that’s where the cultural video idea comes in.
Wedding videos with cultural displays hit differently because you don’t see them every day.
For example, in the 2011 movie, Jumping The Broom, Sabrina Watson (the bride) was made to jump over a room at her wedding reception as a sign of observing a cultural tradition.
Although this action was earlier frowned upon by many, everyone all came to enjoy the moment later because it came off different from what they were used to.
If that was in real life, I bet the couples would watch the video and laugh every year they celebrate their wedding anniversary.
Now, that’s the power of culture.
Cultural wedding clips perform incredibly well on social platforms, as audiences love seeing unique traditions. These videos often trend internationally when edited as short-form content.
13. A Compilation of getting-ready footage
Another lovely idea that would pass for a wedding video is a video highlighting your most important family members and their on-the-day party preps.
In this video, you can have family members’ interviews, getting-ready footage, and their loving messages in voiceover.
‘Morning-of’ mini-documentaries have become a staple in wedding films, with coordinated robe colors, behind-the-scenes audio, and stylized TikTok-ready vertical versions.
14. Have your pet play a part
What if you had a cat or a pup play the role of the ring bearer at your wedding?
How amazing would that be? I bet everyone in attendance would be amazed and amused by the action.
Have your favourite doodle be a ring bearer and film the surprised faces of your loved ones laughing and cheering with delight as he bumbles down the aisle.
Pet involvement videos routinely go viral online — using a GoPro-style pet cam can create adorable first-person footage.
15. Your honeymoon trip
Your wedding day video doesn’t have to be about the on-the-day activities alone.
You can sneak in events that happened before or after.
For example, you can capture moments on your honeymoon trip and make them into a video.
In this video, you can film your partner dozing off on the plane or both of you goofing around.
Many couples now create “Honeymoon Travel Mini-Movies,” blending drone footage, POV adventure clips, and travel-style transitions for a cinematic post-wedding feature.
Final Thoughts
Wedding videos are more creative, cinematic, and personal than ever.
From vertical social trailers to Hollywood-style mini films, couples now have countless ways to capture the magic of their day.
If you want your wedding video to feel timeless — and maybe even go viral — try incorporating one (or several!) of these modern ready video ideas.

Cristian Stanciu is a freelance video editor, owner, and post-production coordinator of Veedyou Media – a company offering video editing services to videographers, marketing agencies, video production studios, or brands all over the globe.




