There are a few moments during a wedding day when the entire world seems to pause: the first look, the walk down the aisle, and of course—the vows. These are the words you’ll remember decades from now, the promises that make your guests tear up, and the part of your wedding video you’ll replay a million times. But let’s be honest: standing in front of the person you love and a crowd of people and multiple cameras can feel like you’re suddenly auditioning for a role you didn’t rehearse for. That’s when couples start speaking stiffly, blinking like malfunctioning A.I. bots, or holding their vow cards like they’re defusing a bomb.

So, how do you avoid looking like a robot during one of the most meaningful moments of your life? As wedding videographers who have filmed hundreds of ceremonies, we’ve learned exactly what helps couples stay natural, emotional, and totally themselves.
1. Practice But Not Too Much
There’s a fine line between being prepared and sounding like you memorized your vows from a teleprompter. Practicing helps calm nerves, but over-rehearsing can make your vows feel scripted.
Read them out loud a few times, get comfortable with the flow, but leave room for organic emotion. A wobbly voice or a laugh at a line you forgot? That’s real, and it looks beautiful on film.
2. Hold Your Partner’s Hands (Yes, Really)
When couples stand stiff with their arms glued to their sides, it instantly reads as awkward. Holding hands does more than look natural—it grounds you. It’s impossible to feel robotic when you’re literally touching the person you’re marrying.
Also, your hands won’t feel weird or “in the way,” which means your body language stays relaxed and connected on camera.

3. Look at Your Partner, Not the Guests
Your vows aren’t a speech to the audience—they’re a promise to one person. You don’t need to scan the room like a politician addressing the nation.
Focus on your partner’s eyes. Videographers love capturing those intimate glances, and it keeps you present instead of worrying about who’s watching.
4. Take Your Time (Slow Is Romantic)
Nerves make people talk fast—like, auctioneer fast. But when you rush through your vows, you look tense on video.
Take slow breaths. Pause naturally. Let yourself feel the words. Those moments of silence? They’re cinematic gold.
5. Use Your Own Voice, Not “Wedding Voice”
Some people suddenly switch to a formal, monotone “ceremony voice,” like they’re narrating a corporate training video. Forget that. Speak how you normally speak.
- If you’re a bubbly, expressive person—sound bubbly and expressive.
- If you’re quiet and sentimental—sound quiet and sentimental.
- Authenticity always looks better on camera.

6. Don’t Worry About Crying (Robots Don’t Cry!)
If you tear up, smile, sniffle, or even laugh through your vows, that emotional mix is exactly the kind of footage that becomes unforgettable in your final film.
The goal isn’t perfection—it’s honesty. Your wedding video will feel way more powerful when you let yourself react naturally.
7. Keep Your Vow Card Comfortable
Sounds small, but it matters: hold your vow card at a natural height—waist or chest level—not directly in front of your face where it blocks the camera or hides your expressions.
Also, write your vows on something sturdy. Nothing says “robot panic mode activated” like a shaky piece of paper flapping in the wind.
8. Trust Your Videographer
A good videographer knows how to frame you, guide you, and reassure you. If you feel nervous or unsure where to stand or how to hold your card, ask. We’re there to make you look your best.
The more you trust the process, the more relaxed—and human—you’ll feel.
Final Thoughts
Your vows don’t need to be flawless, dramatic, or poetic. They just need to be you. When you let go of the pressure to “perform,” you create a moment that looks natural, heartfelt, and effortlessly beautiful on camera.
You’re not a robot. You’re two humans, wildly in love, promising forever. And trust us—that always makes incredible wedding film moments.
