The 5 Most Notorious Celebrity Weddings From Recent History!
The column gown cut on bias sheathing the figure before falling, the choice of venue as overt power move, and the absence of a wedding party as deliberate counter-programming — this is the language of a ceremony engineered to be studied, not merely admired.

The Dress as Statement
Swift wore custom haute couture by Jonathan Anderson for Christian Dior. Anderson confirmed the collaboration in remarks to Women's Wear Daily, describing the process as "an emotional thing doing someone's wedding." The construction came out of the Dior ateliers on Avenue Montaigne, with Swift's longtime stylist Joseph Cassell working alongside Anderson and the betrothed. Both bride and groom wore Christian Louboutin shoes; Swift layered the look with Cartier jewelry. The choice of Anderson, mid-reign as Dior's creative director and fresh off presenting his second Haute Couture collection (fall 2026-27) in Paris, situates the dress firmly within an active creative arc rather than a nostalgic one.
That the gown has not yet been publicly photographed is its own intentional move. A Dior spokesperson told The New York Times that Swift will be the first to release images on Instagram, declining to specify when.
Ceremony, Form, and a Calculated Absence
The structural choices were as deliberate as the wardrobe. Adam Sandler officiated. There were no bridesmaids or groomsmen; instead, Austin Swift served as man of honor and Jason Kelce as best man, per press materials confirmed by Swift's longtime publicist. Madison Square Garden itself broadcast "JusT&T Married!" across its signage on the night of. The guest list — Jason Sudeikis, Hugh Grant, Ethan Hawke, the Haim sisters, Dakota Johnson, Julianne Moore, Mariska Hargitay, Bradley Cooper, and Gigi Hadid among them — functioned as a curated cross-section of legacy Hollywood and contemporary fashion adjacency.
The Bill, the Venue, and What It Signals
The choice of Madison Square Garden is not incidental. New York City public comments attributed to Zohran Mamdani state Swift paid a $160,000 fee for the star-studded ceremony, a figure consistent with hosting a private event inside a city-owned arena. The venue converts a pop concert infrastructure into a ceremonial site — a transfer of vocabulary from tour stage to matrimonial rite, and one that signals scale without resorting to the increasingly common château-and-sprawl model favored by previous era's spectacles.
The garment will eventually be documented. Until then, the wedding's silhouette — in dress, in venue, in party structure — remains a study in control, conspicuous in its restraint, and engineered for archival rather than viral permanence. For readers mapping the intersection of celebrity culture and curated consumer moments, this is the kind of high-profile occasion that reshapes how adjacent industries — from subscription box curation for milestone gifting to bridal planning services — position their own offerings in the surrounding noise.