Dee Lewis always wanted an outdoor wedding, but she had lived in Texas long enough to know you can never depend on the weather.

She opted for the next best thing — getting married under the stars in a climate-controlled environment at the Fort Worth planetarium.

Sign up for our newsletter

* indicates required

“My wedding was so different and special,” Lewis says. “I still love my wedding. I’d do it the same way today.”

A celestial ceremony wasn’t always written in the stars for the couple. Lewis and her husband grew up together on Anita Street, but in high school, he dated her best friend. One day, their connection clicked, and they decided to marry in 2004.

It seemed like fate that the pair, who lived in the Stardust apartments on Gaston Avenue, should have an out-of-this-world wedding, which they announced with star invitations.

The ceremony took place in a round theater at the planetarium. Seats were moved to the side to create an aisle that Lewis walked down with her mom. The projector was turned off during the ceremony, but once the couple was pronounced man and wife, shooting stars, comets and asteroids flew through the night sky on the theater’s walls.

Lewis’s story reminds us that weddings aren’t just about traditions or venues—they’re about stories. Her decision to hold the ceremony at the Fort Worth planetarium was more than just a clever workaround for unpredictable Texas weather; it was a deeply personal and poetic choice. From starry invitations to cosmic visuals that marked the start of their marriage, the entire experience was uniquely theirs.

It reflected who they were, where they’d come from, and how far they planned to journey together. Even years later, the memory still sparkles like the simulated constellations that once danced above their vows.

For couples seeking that kind of timeless, story-driven experience, capturing the atmosphere of the day is everything. That’s where the artistry behind cinematic wedding films becomes essential.

Filmmakers like Adam Gorham understand that a wedding isn’t just an event—it’s a visual poem in motion. Whether it’s a planetarium ceremony or a candlelit barn reception, the ability to preserve that energy, light, and emotion is a craft all its own. The portfolio on https://adamgorhamfilms.com reveals how moments big and small—like a glance, a laugh, or a comet streaking across a digital sky—are documented with the same reverence and detail, allowing couples to relive their one-of-a-kind celebration for years to come.

The couple extended the extraterrestrial theme to the reception with star-shaped food served on plates decorated with star stickers. After eschewing a traditional venue, perhaps it’s no surprise that the Lewises also decided to forgo the bouquet and garter toss. Instead, the couple gave those tokens to the guests who had been married the longest.

“We tried to make it super special for everybody, not just us,” Lewis says. “We took the time to make it about family. That’s why people have appreciated it for so long.”