Olympic monitor stars Noah Lyles and Junelle Bromfield are formally husband and spouse!
The gold medal sprinter and the Olympic bronze medalist, each 28, tied the knot on Saturday, April 4, in Trenton, Ga., at The Conservatory at Blackberry Ridge, in a celebration that blended magnificence, tradition, and Black love beneath a becoming theme, “shades of melanin.”
“I heard I didn’t stroll down the aisle. I heard that I ran,” Bromfield joked in an interview with Vogue, later describing your complete day as “magical.”
The festivities started with a wide ranging out of doors ceremony bathed in gentle impartial tones like champagne, beige, dusty rose, and pale yellow. Whereas studying their customized vows, Lyles held Bromfield’s vow ebook for her as her nerves had been getting the higher of her. All through the day, the couple deliberately wove collectively Bromfield’s Jamaican roots and Lyles’ Black American heritage. Vogue, in fact, performed an enormous function.
For her half, the bride walked down the aisle in a romantic, regal customized princess robe by Pantora Bridal, that includes crystal gildings throughout the bodice that spilled right into a dramatic, full skirt. The selection was particularly significant, because the designer shouldn’t be solely Black but additionally a fellow Jamaican lady. For the reception, she switched into a blinding off-the-shoulder white lace corset mini costume with lengthy sleeves, intricate beading, and a flowing prepare, balancing regal bridal glamour with a bit of fashionable edge.
In the meantime, for the ceremony, the groom stepped out in a textured brown swimsuit by New York-based designer Musika. After studying his bride deliberate a re-assessment, Lyles determined to lift the style stakes himself, commissioning a brown model of the swimsuit he famously wore to the Met Gala.
The couple’s brown shade palette carried via to their marriage ceremony occasion, with bridesmaids and groomsmen wearing various shades of the wealthy shade. Lyles additionally added a playful private contact, lining every groomsman’s jacket with their favourite anime character, a nod to his well-known love of anime.
The day additionally held house for remembrance. A reserved seat honored family members who couldn’t be there, whereas Bromfield, who misplaced her mom in 2021, was moved to tears by her marriage ceremony planner shocking her with a small photograph of her mom hooked up to her bouquet as a pendant so she might carry her along with her down the aisle.
After the ceremony, the celebration actually shifted into excessive gear. The reception that adopted featured vigorous performances from the bridal occasion, together with the groomsmen jigging to “Turnt Up,” the bridesmaids dancing to Jamaican hits, and the newlyweds sharing their first dance to a mix of Jamaican and American classics after Lyles danced together with his mom and Bromfield danced along with her father. The couple minimize right into a multi-tiered ombré brown cake. There was a band, a DJ, and a reside efficiency by gospel singer Tasha Cobbs. By the couple’s account, as soon as the dance flooring opened, nobody needed to go away.
The night time ended with pizza and on a reasonably cinematic word with a fireworks show adopted by a delicate rainfall that the couple initially fearful may derail the festivities however in the end arrived like a punctuation mark including to the magic.
Bromfield and Lyles tied the knot after saying their engagement in October 2024, after about two years of relationship. Nevertheless, the 2 Olympic sprinters technically first linked in 2018, when Bromfield made the primary transfer by way of Lyles’ Instagram DMs.
“Junelle determined to slip into my DMs, asking me the query, ‘Do you cook dinner?’” Lyles recalled whereas chatting with Vogue. “And so from there, it led to a really lengthy seven-year story of us ultimately assembly, falling in love, with the ability to be with one another, not with the ability to be with one another, after which lastly getting right into a relationship the place we have now at all times stayed collectively—and now have gotten married.”
So, don’t be afraid to shoot your shot in these streets!
















