Temi Otedola and Mr Eazi's Multi-Country Wedding: Fashion Icons, Family Traditions, and Global Celebrations
Oluwatosin “Mr Eazi” Ajibade and Temi Otedola’s journey began on a cold night in London in January 2017. The Afrobeats star attended a performance by Florence Otedola at the Tate Club, where he met Temi. Five years later, Eazi proposed in Venice during the filming of his music video for “Legalize.” By 2025, the couple celebrated their marriage with three weddings across multiple countries, organized by Califano Productions.
Temi Otedola and Mr Eazi’s three-country wedding mixed Monaco elegance, Dubai tradition, and designer fashion in an emotional celebration.
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Their first ceremony took place on May 9 in Monaco, a date chosen to honor Eazi’s late mother’s birthday. The official event at Mairie de Monaco in Monte Carlo reflected the couple’s understated style. Temi wore a custom Wiederhoeft suit paired with Briony Raymond jewelry, while Eazi chose Louis Vuitton. “We’ve been engaged for three years and together for eight, so we had this weirdly calm energy all day,” Temi explained. “It just made sense. Just the two of us, in Monaco, a place we partly call home, and no distractions, no fanfare.”
After the civil ceremony, Temi changed into a Christopher John Rogers black-and-white polka-dot dress for a champagne toast at Villa La Vigie, once the home of Karl Lagerfeld in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin.
Two months later, the couple hosted a Yoruba wedding at the Otedola family residence in Dubai. Temi’s bridal wardrobe featured four custom designs by Zac Posen, Miss Sohee, Lisa Folawiyo, and Oscar de la Renta. “I wanted to have some of my favorite designers and visionaries create traditional Nigerian attire, and I was blown away by their interpretations,” she said. Carrie Goldberg of CLG Creative and Momo Hassan-Odukale worked alongside her as bridal stylists.
Mr Eazi, styled by Jason Rembert, entered to the rhythm of live drummers wearing a Lisa Folawiyo Studio custom outfit and carrying a cane by Tom Talmon Studio. Temi followed in a sculptural Zac Posen duchesse satin dress and gele, walking in to the sound of Eazi’s own hit “Skintight.”
Designer Zac Posen described his vision: “I wanted something that felt almost like Nefertiti. The duchesse satin dress followed the contours of her body, with a statement bow in the back shaped like dove wings. It had kind of an old world quality mixed with a futurism and modernism.”
The Yoruba ceremony carried deep emotional weight for both families. Temi reflected: “I think we both were in the headspace of it being a day to celebrate our families and culture, but the realization of how profound it was set in as soon as we both walked out. Sitting with my parents for what is symbolically the last time before they send me to my new family particularly hit home for me.”
When Temi addressed her new husband as “my oko,” meaning “husband” in Yoruba, Eazi admitted the moment nearly overwhelmed him. “I almost shed a tear,” he confessed.