How to design wedding drone show animations that actually tell your story


After spending over a decade working in the drone industry (including reviewing professional drone shows and even judging the SPH Engineering drone light show contest) I thought I understood what made a great aerial display. Then I had to design one for my own wedding.

This year, I learned that designing wedding drone show animations is fundamentally different from designing for theme parks, concerts or corporate events. Weddings aren’t about spectacle for spectacle’s sake. They’re about storytelling.

For those who haven’t heard, I got married on September 20, 2025 to Hamilton Nguyen. Yes, we had a wedding drone show sendoff, coordinated by the amazing team over at Los Angeles-based Electric Sky Drone Shows with support from UVify.

Here’s everything I learned about creating animations that actually mean something.

Start with story, not visuals

When Ali Amini, the co-creator of Electric Sky Drone Shows, first asked what animations I wanted, I had to ask myself more than just “What would look cool in the sky?” With wedding drone show animations, the right question is: “What story do we want to tell?”

Ali was intentionally open-ended at first. He didn’t come with a template or checklist. He just asked about our relationship: How did we meet? What do we love doing together? What are our shared passions? What was the proposal like? From there, he asked me to come back to him with some animations I wanted.

I actually used ChatGPT to help brainstorm initial concepts because I was overwhelmed by the blank canvas. It didn’t even give bad ideas. For example, I suggested a coffee cup and a bagel to symbolize how we met on the app Coffee Meets Bagel, and AI suggested projecting both simultaneously, then letting them morph into a heart (that animation actually made the final cut in our drone show).

Your love story is already original

The refreshing thing about designing a wedding drone show? You don’t need to be wildly creative.

Simply telling the story of your relationship — how you met, what you enjoy doing together, how the proposal happened — is inherently original because it’s yours.

No one else met on Coffee Meets Bagel and got engaged at Neuschwanstein Castle while both being competitive weightlifters. (That’s our specific, weird, wonderful story.)

Your story is different. That’s the whole point.

For wedding drone shows, you might allow your narrative arc to follow a natural structure like this:

  1. How you met (that was our coffee cup + bagel)
  2. What you love doing together (our weightlifter animation, a roller coaster, a film camera, a beach)
  3. The proposal moment (our Neuschwanstein Castle)
  4. Your commitment (rings, initials or full names, wedding date)

Now fill in those four lines with your own story (and feel free to add more, like multiple examples of things you love doing together). Most wedding drone shows will have 8-12 animations, so you can come with multiple.

In fact, I had a few more ideas of animations (mostly to symbolize other fun trips we’ve taken together, like an Eiffel Tower for Paris or a camel for the time we rode through the Moroccan desert). Sadly those didn’t make the final cut, as we did have a time and animation limit.

(Photo by Palos Studio)

We did get creative with our wedding drone show intro. We had a travel-themed wedding (as we both love to travel). The invitations were boarding passes, and the seat assignments were designed as a gate arrivals board. We had a sugar airplane mounted to our cake, and we even let our guests vote on our honeymoon destination via a map with pushpins.

So when it came to our drone show, we did open with a literal drone projected in the sky (yes, I am The Drone Girl!) but our second animation was a globe. From there, an illuminated pushpin “dropped” on the globe in San Francisco, where we live today (yes, it’s our favorite city in the world).

(Photo by Palos Studio)

Use classic wedding imagery sparingly, but lean on specific animations

We included wedding rings, clinking champagne glasses and our names in a heart. These are classic for a reason — they work.

But if your entire show is hearts, rings, flowers, doves and “Just Married” text, you’re wasting the medium. These classic wedding symbols should be accent pieces, not the main course.

(Photo by Palos Studio)

It was the weightlifter animation that got the loudest response of our entire show. Why? Because half our guests were competitive weightlifters.

They howled when that animation appeared. They were filming, cheering, losing their minds. It was an inside reference that half the audience deeply understood and the other half found delightfully weird.

With the rings, people appreciated them, but they didn’t howl at them. The lesson? Don’t aim for universal appeal. Aim for personal resonance.

Here are some ideas that come to mind of hyper-specific animations that could work for you:

  • Your pet
  • A meal you cooked on your first date
  • Hobbies you do together
  • A symbol of the destination you’re headed to for your honeymoon

Voiceover changes everything

Tannaz Amini (the sister half of Electric Sky’s leadership) pushed hard for voiceover narration. I hesitated. Our DJ was set up inside. Adding outdoor audio felt complicated. Did we really need it?

Having done it, I concur: Yes. Absolutely yes.

Voiceover transformed our show from “cool visuals” to “emotional storytelling.”

Without voiceover, guests see a castle and think, “Nice, a castle.”

With voiceover, guests learn our proposal story. It gives context, emotion, and meaning to every animation. It turned abstract shapes into chapters of our story.

Hamilton and I recorded it at home in his closet (they say audio quality is better in closets!). It didn’t need to be professionally produced — authenticity mattered more than polish.

The design process: what to expect with your wedding drone show

We had about six planning calls with Ali over the course of a month. Our timeline was tight because we threw together our wedding drone show fairly last-minute (though I recommend giving yourself more than a few months if you can).

Here’s a rough outline of how the planning calls around our wedding drone show animations broke down:

Meeting 1: Initial brainstorming

Ali asked about our story. I rambled about Coffee Meets Bagel, weightlifting, the proposal, our travels. He took notes.

Meeting 2: Venue assessment

Ali needed to scout our venue (remotely, via Google Maps and our photos) to understand launch site constraints, viewing angles and max drone capacity. Sadly, our venue couldn’t accommodate unlimited drones. We were capped at 200 due to space limitations.

Meetings 3-4: Animation development

Ali went back to his animation team with our ideas. They came back with rough concepts. We refined, added details, cut things that weren’t working. This was iterative.

Meeting 5: Voiceover planning

Tannaz joined this one and convinced us to add narration. We discussed the order of animations and how to structure the script to match the visuals.

Meeting 6: Final review

We watched the animated preview with our audio synced, and made tiny tweaks, which involved re-syncying the audio to match the new timing.

Important note: Ali and Tannaz from Electric Sky Drone Shows were super flexible. We could have done more or fewer meetings depending on how detail-oriented we were. Some couples might nail it in three calls. Others might need ten. The key is finding a company (and a point person) who’s willing to collaborate iteratively rather than just handing you a template.

Want to see the finished product? You can, here:

Technical considerations that affect wedding drone show animations

A few practical constraints to keep in mind about your wedding drone show animations:

Drone count limits your complexity More intricate animations require more drones. We had 200, which gave us decent flexibility but wasn’t unlimited. In fact, we had a heart time spelling out “Sally & Hamilton” in a heart. His name became just Ham (which to be fair, is a real nickname for him).

If you have 50 drones, you’ll need even simpler shapes and may not be able to spell your names. If you have 1,000 drones, you can do incredibly detailed work (and I envy you).

Venue space determines your canvas The physical area available for the drone grid affects how large your animations can be and how much buffer space you need. Our venue constraints meant we couldn’t go bigger than 200 drones even if we’d wanted to.

Text needs to be legible If you’re including words (names, dates, quotes), keep them short and use clear fonts. Cursive is risky. All caps is usually safer.

Let your wedding drone show animations tell your story

The best wedding drone show animations aren’t the most technically impressive or visually stunning (though those things are nice, but leave those to drone shows gunning for awards).

The best wedding drone show animations are the ones that make your guests say, “That is SO them.”

Your drone show should feel like a love letter written in light. Generic hearts in the sky are fine. But a weightlifter doing a snatch? That’s unforgettable.

Planning your own wedding drone show and need animation advice? Connect with me on Intro! I’m happy to talk through your story and help you figure out which moments deserve to be displayed in the sky.

By the way, The New York Times featured my wedding drone show in their Vows section! Read their piece here.

The post How to design wedding drone show animations that actually tell your story appeared first on The Drone Girl.

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