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IBADAN — Two brides in identical white dresses. Two grooms in matching suits and bow ties. Two sets of twin children serving as page boys and flower girls.
Giant posters featuring two couples with the same names. Even the wedding hashtag — #TwinningInLove2026 — left little room for confusion.
As twin sisters Taiwo and Kehinde Adediran walked down the aisle arm in arm with their father at a church in Ibadan, southwestern Nigeria, to tie the knot with twin brothers Taiwo and Kehinde Oguntoye, guests rose from their seats, lifting smartphones to capture what many described as a once-in-a-lifetime wedding.

Kehinde Oguntoye (L), Kehinde Adediran (2nd L) Taiwo Adediran(2nd R) and Taiwo Oguntoye (R) poses for a photograph ahead of their traditional wedding ceremony in Ibadan, on June 19, 2026. Two brides in identical white dresses.

Grooms and brides dance during their wedding ceremony at the Bishop Akinyele Memorial Anglican Church in Ibadan, on June 20, 2026.
It is common to see twins dressed alike from childhood, sometimes down to matching shoes, jewellery and accessories.
That sense of twinning shaped every moment of the wedding weekend.
During Friday's traditional engagement ceremony, the couples appeared in matching red outfits as relatives danced around piles of gifts — from yams and drinks to fabrics and suitcases — presented by the grooms' family to the brides'.
Wedding portraits were carefully choreographed, as guests repeatedly stopped to compare the similarities between the siblings, who are in their early 40s.
The Oguntoye brothers are fraternal twins, while the Adediran sisters are identical twins.
On Saturday, the celebration moved from church pews to a sprawling Yoruba "owambe" reception.
Smoke machines filled the entrance as the couples emerged through flashing lights to cheers and a sea of raised smartphones.
Among the guests were dozens of fellow twins.
"I've always wished to marry a twin as well," laughed Kehinde Akanji, 26, a friend of the grooms attending with his own twin brother. "It's our first time seeing something like this."
For Dupe Aduroja Giwa, the Alaga — the master of ceremonies of the traditional wedding — a lifetime of nuptials had not prepared her for this one.
"Twins from the same family marrying twins from the same family?" she said. "I have never seen this in my life. It is a privilege to be part of it."
After all, it is not every day that one Taiwo marries another Taiwo, and one Kehinde marries another Kehinde.