unconventional weddings<\/a> lately and here\u2019s another unique couple who took a time-honoured tradition and did it their own way.<\/p>\nSydney scientist and academic, Tyler Troy, proposed to his girlfriend of seven years, Sophia Johnson, in a way that only a scientist can \u2013 through a telescope which beamed \u201cWill you marry me?\u201d up onto the moon. Well, not exactly, but tax consultant, Sophia, tells how her inventive husband made it happen.<\/p>\n
\u201cIt was a regular Friday night after work in August. We ordered takeout and the telescope was perennially on the veranda, so I didn\u2019t expect a thing when he said the full moon looked amazing and that I should have a look.<\/p>\n
Tyler managed to put a tiny message inside the telescope, so that when I looked through it up at the moon, it looked like a message on the surface! It blew me away.<\/p>\n
When I turned around he had a little ring that he had handmade at work \u2013 aluminium, plated in gold, with a little gem super-glued on! It wasn\u2019t very sturdy for every day but I was blown away by his effort and creativity. I subsequently bought a beautiful tanzanite ring at a local jewellery auction.”<\/p>\n
Around the same time, Tyler accepted a post-doctorate job in chemistry research in San Francisco and the pair, both 29, set out to plan two monumental life-projects at once \u2013 a wedding and <\/i>a move overseas. \u201cIt was intense,\u201d says Sophia. But there are only smiles, love and happiness to show in the photos of their relaxed, “hippy” park wedding and backyard cocktail reception.<\/p>\n
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Sophia and Tyler’s wedding ceremony was held at Jubliee Park in Glebe, Sydney, with a cocktail reception back at their Glebe home afterward. “We love the park and the foreshore walk,” Sophia says of their ceremony venue. “It made it relaxed and it was easy for guests to walk or get public transport to the reception at our house.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n