
Photos: Diovane Moraes/Everton Rose Associates
The
29-year-olds, who are from Passo Fundo, Brazil, walked down the aisle
three in a row, condensing their father’s duties of giving away his
girls into one ceremony. The altar was specially constructed to
accommodate the entire party, including their husbands. Rafaela
wed Rafael, Rochele married Gabriel, and Tagiane exchanged vows with
Eduardo. Luckily, the men in their lives are unrelated, all standing
tall at varying heights with no genetic resemblance in the slightest.

Because
having their sisters didn’t seem to suffice as enough support, each
also chose six bridesmaids, wearing dresses in yellow for Rafaela, blue
for Rochele and red for Tagiane (matching their flowers), summing up to a
total of 18 women in primary colored dresses. Even without the flowers
to tell them apart, Eduardo, Tagiane’s partner, wasn’t confused at
all. “Oh yes, I knew which one was mine, for sure. I knew as soon as she
entered the church, she was the most beautiful,” he said, according to
the Daily Mail.

While
this might seem strange and out of the ordinary, twins (and other
multiples) do share special connections. Certainly extreme, it’s not the
first time special occasions have been grouped by family members. Five
of eight siblings in an Arizona clan said their “I dos” in a “mega
wedding” in 2012. Four Utah siblings did the same last summer. but drew the line at going on a honeymoon together. In the most complex of them all, a set of twins married a set of twins in 1999 in a double wedding, and one couple even had a set of identical twins of their own. In 1987, other twins that married twins even gave birth on the same day.
from yahoo.
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