Animated wedding invitations, painted in Tuscany
An animated wedding invitation is thirty seconds of hand-painted watercolor: your venue painting itself into view, the two of you inside the scene, your names written in live calligraphy. Made vertical for WhatsApp, so it travels from guest to guest the way paper never could.
Painted from your real venue
Send us three to five phone photos — your ceremony spot, your reception villa, the two of you. Every scene is painted from those photos: your masseria in Puglia, your Amalfi terrace, your Tuscan courtyard. The couple always appears from behind, inside the painting; faces are never shown.
Made for destination weddings
We are based in Tuscany and work with couples marrying anywhere in Italy. Invitations come in English, Italian or Arabic — or bilingual, so your Italian family and your friends abroad each get the invitation in their own language. Everything is delivered as a single vertical video file: no apps, no links, nothing for your guests to sign up for.
What it costs
The full invitation — three painted scenes, about thirty seconds, music and calligraphy included — is €290. A two-scene Save the Date is €190; the five-scene full story is €440 with a second language included. Delivery within 48 hours of receiving your photos, one revision included.
Frequently asked questions
How much does an animated wedding invitation cost?
The full invitation — three watercolor scenes, about 30 seconds, with music and calligraphy — is €290. A Save the Date is €190, the five-scene full story €440 with a second language included.
How long does it take?
48 hours from confirmation and photos. One revision is included.
Do you work with couples outside Italy?
Yes — most of our couples marry in Italy but live abroad. Everything happens over WhatsApp and email: photos in, painted invitation out.
Which languages are available?
English, Italian and Arabic, or bilingual versions. Calligraphy is adapted to each script — including right-to-left Arabic.
Will our faces appear?
Never. The couple is always painted from behind, inside the scene — elegant, and private enough to share freely.