The Orma Blog

How to Preserve Wedding Memories Beyond the Photos: A Complete Guide

Your wedding produces at least eight categories of memory. Most couples preserve two or three. The rest — audio, video messages, physical ephemera — dissolve within months. Each layer has its own preservation window, and some are measured in hours.

Audio: vows, speeches, ceremony

Of everything couples regret losing, audio stings most. Photos show the wedding. Audio captures what it sounded like.

What to record: Vows (lapel mic if possible). Toasts from both families. The officiant’s full ceremony. Ambient sound during the first dance.

Three ways to capture it:

Crucial step: Label files within 48 hours. Voice_001.m4a is useless in a year. Rename to ceremony-vows.m4a, toast-best-man.m4a.

Guest video messages

A quiet corner with a phone on a tripod, a ring light, and a sign: “Leave us a message. We’ll watch these on our first anniversary.”

Gear: Tripod ($15-25), ring light ($25-40), sign, optional Bluetooth remote ($12). Total: $50-100. Setup: 15 minutes.

Placement: Near the bar or photo booth — enough traffic, quiet enough to be heard. Never next to the DJ.

Don’t skip: Lighting (dark corner = silhouette) and a sample video from the couple explaining how it works.

Digital backup (the 3-2-1 rule)

Three copies, two media types, one offsite. That’s the minimum.

  1. Primary copy on your laptop — organized by category. The one you browse.
  2. External SSD — 1TB Samsung T7 ($90). Not a flash drive (3-5 year lifespan).
  3. Cloud — Google Drive ($10/mo for 2TB), Backblaze ($9/mo unlimited), or Dropbox ($12/mo).

Format survival guide: JPEG and H.264 MP4 are universal — readable for decades. HEIC less so. RAW files (.CR2, .NEF) are proprietary — convert to DNG. Old video formats (.mts, .avi) should get an MP4 fallback copy.

Prevent digital decay: Migrate to new media every 5-7 years. Keep a universal-format copy alongside originals. Never rely on one cloud provider.

Physical preservation

Bouquet

Starts wilting in 36 hours. Three options:

Paper goods

Acid-free archival sleeves ($15-30). Store flat. No sunlight. Save: invitation suite, program, menu, escort card, handwritten notes.

Dress

Passing down: professional preservation ($200-400). Museum-quality box. Inspect every 2-3 years. Keeping for yourself: cleaned, breathable garment bag (not plastic), padded hanger.

Time capsules and traditions

Anniversary ritual (pick one): Watch the ceremony video. Read vows aloud. Open the guest book. Listen to speeches.

Five-year time capsule: Vows, bottle of wine, printed guest photos, invitation, letters to each other written on the wedding night, dried petals, backup drive. Seal in the first week.

Here’s how Orma handles it

Orma covers the guest photo layer — the one that vanishes into two hundred camera rolls. You get a QR code. Guests scan it. On iPhone, the album opens via Apple App Clip in under three seconds — no install, no account. Photos and videos pool into one live feed, with a Chromecast-powered photo wall on the reception TV. Unlimited, full resolution, free for guests. One zip download at the end.

Set up your wedding album. See how it works.

Common mistakes

FAQ

How soon should we start? Flowers: 72 hours. Digital: first week. Paper: first month. Textiles: first month.

What’s the one thing to do for digital files? External SSD + cloud backup. That alone saves more archives than any other habit.

Budget? Digital backup: $80-100. Flowers: $30-500. Archival supplies: $30-50. Message station: $50-100. Dress: $200-400 (optional).

Will file formats become obsolete? Not urgently for JPEG/MP4/WAV. The risk is in proprietary formats. Ask vendors for universal-format copies.

Space for physical items? One archival shoebox holds the essentials. It fits on a closet shelf.

Time capsule worth it? Yes — especially if you’re not sentimental. Five years of marriage changes how you read those letters.


Thinking through the full preservation puzzle? Create your Orma album in under a minute, or see how it works for weddings.