A historic wedding for a couple that MADE history… literally! 🪓



    by Shoe_boooo

    22 Comments

    1. HugoZHackenbush2 on

      French police still don’t know who started the Notre Dame fire, but they have a hunch..

    2. i_fuckin_luv_it_mate on

      *Whittle* known fact, she almost *leaves* him at the altar for not giving his ex the full *axe* and finding him *bark*ing up the wrong *tree* in some of his text messages. Thankfully, they *wood* rectify the misunderstanding when she *saw* the full convo was actually quite *plain* and above *board*, and they go on to *join* in ma*tree*mony.

    3. Short-Display-1659 on

      That’s awesome for him. I believe they have turned away many celebrities and high profile people before. I’m glad they make exceptions for those truly worthy.

    4. I love this, this story warms my heart! Finally some good news. Their wedding photos must be epic! What an awesome story for the grandkids, too!

    5. Veritas_Vanitatum on

      Can someone explain to me how 800 years old technology is better than a circular saw? Doesn’t the end product look the same?

    6. NightStalkerXIV on

      It’s impressive, but does the specific older process actually affect the result of the material..?

    7. this is actually peak. literally perfect, not having the rich just buy their way into things.

    8. The claim that it “must be done” with an axe is utter nonsense. It could have been done much faster with modern tools, but the decision was made to rebuild Notre Dame using historical tools so that, over time, it would resemble the lost original.

      The Doloire axe leaves specific marks in the wood, imperfections that contribute to its historical charm.

      I like the decision and it’s a miracle that they really made it in time.

    9. That send-off was awesome and terrifying. Imagine getting married and then walking through a guillotine honor guard

    10. amnorobotquery on

      Congratulations to the happy couple.
      As an observer and having heard about the extraordinary and hard work done to retain the style of the original carpentry I can only say ” Very Very Cool indeed “

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