Toronto Star

Logging on for love, in the age of COVID-19

With wedding plans interrupte­d, some turn to tech for celebratio­ns

- AUDREY CARLETON

Matthew Huntley and his wife were in the final stages of planning their May 2020 wedding when COVID-19 hit.

By mid-March, the Fredericto­n, N.B.-based couple had already paid for their celebratio­n in full, moved their date once, and spent an estimated “600 days” preparing, Huntley says. So when restrictio­ns on large gatherings and inter-provincial travel were imposed, the pair weren’t ready to give up. Instead, they opted to hold a small ceremony in a friend’s backyard with a few guests in-person. The rest tuned in via Zoom and Facebook Live. “We wanted to get it done,” Huntley says. “It was just a little easier just to do it now. It’s about being married, it’s not about anything else.”

The duo are among countless couples who, in recent months, have faced the seemingly impossible decision to change longstandi­ng plans for one of the biggest days of their lives. While many couples across Canada have opted to reschedule their weddings and hold out for the day they can safely celebrate in person, a handful are leveraging technology to recreate this magic online.

But Huntley cautions other couples going the Zoom route to be protective of their privacy. The end of his own wedding was “zoombombed” — infiltrate­d by malicious hackers in other parts of the world, who replaced the ceremony feed with disturbing images — and he’s spent the weeks since trying to get his $20 subscripti­on fee refunded.

“Thank goodness we had our friend (running Facebook Live) as well,” he says. “So, we have that memory and it got all of it, from start to finish.”

Beyond the technologi­cal challenge of configurin­g a livestream, virtual weddings are typically much easier to plan than traditiona­l weddings, says Toronto-based wedding planner Trevor Frankfort.

“You’re not planning for hundreds of people … you’re really just kind of tailoring it to yourself,” Frankfort says. “You don’t really need all the food, you don’t need the band, you don’t need any of the bells and whistles that come with having the wedding at an actual venue.”

The legal requiremen­ts of a wedding — like an officiant and pair of witnesses — are still necessary to ensure that the matrimony holds up in court. But beyond these staples, going the virtual route can be a low-cost, low-stakes way for couples to safely celebrate their love with friends and family.

However, those looking to add additional touches can get creative. Frankfort has seen some clients send champagne and other celebrator­y trinkets to guests for opening mid-ceremony. Others have hired caterers to deliver pre-prepared meals to guests to eat while livestream­ing and conversing with one another. Much like at a traditiona­l wedding, the possibilit­ies for pampering attendees are limitless, and can cost as much or as little as the coupleto-be can afford.

Frankfort urges couples considerin­g virtual ceremonies to think critically before committing to hosting a virtual wedding. While it’s an affordable option for those on a deadline, couples with time in their schedule may one day be glad they waited.

“Everybody wants to have the big party, everybody wants to have everybody together, family and friends,” Frankfort says. “If it’s not dire to have the wedding right now, then why not wait?”

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