This November, luxury event production powerhouse KDE Events will stage its most intimate and emotionally charged production to date: The Sisterhood Wedding, a multi-day, groomless celebration centering on healing, self-devotion, and the unshakable bonds of sisterhood.
The mastermind Kaky Daniel, founder and creative director of KDE Events, the event flips the traditional wedding script entirely. Instead of walking down the aisle toward a partner, Kaky will stand before more than 40 women who have loved, supported, and uplifted her, committing herself to them, and to herself, in a ceremony rich with symbolism, cultural heritage, and unapologetic self-love.
A Wedding Without a Groom and Without Apology
The Sisterhood Wedding will be staged in Cartagena, Colombia, the birthplace of Kaky’s mother. There will be a bridal gown, vows, music, rituals, and a symbolic altar commitment but no groom. Instead, the celebration will honor the community of women who have been Kaky’s anchor through joy and loss.
“This isn’t just a wedding,” Kaky says. “It’s a reclamation. It’s a spiritual homecoming. It’s about honoring the women who’ve held me, uplifted me, and never left.”
Born From Loss, Reimagined Through Joy
The concept of The Sisterhood Wedding was shaped by a deep personal tragedy. In 2022, on the eve of her birthday, Kaky lost her boyfriend Giovanni in a senseless act of violence in Mexico. What could have been a day forever defined by grief became instead the catalyst for transformation.
“Giovanni always told me I’d never forget him,” Kaky reflects. “He made sure of that. His loss pushed me into deep spiritual work and made me redefine what love really means. This wedding is part of that healing.”
In 2023, Kaky chose not to mourn in isolation. She launched KakyFest, a birthday festival dedicated to joy, healing, and intentional living. This year, that celebration evolves into The Sisterhood Wedding, a more focused and ceremonial expression of love, loss, and renewal.
KDE Events Luxury Meets Emotional Depth
Under Kaky’s leadership, KDE Events has become the go-to for transformative luxury experiences, producing high-profile weddings, celebrity galas, brand activations, and corporate retreats for elite clients and Fortune 500 companies. With offices in Los Angeles and Miami, the company is known for blending emotional resonance with sophisticated, world-class design.
Yet, The Sisterhood Wedding marks an unprecedented step for KDE, a project where the founder herself is at the heart of the story. The event will feature ancestral healing rituals, luxury dinners, wellness activities, spiritual ceremonies, and spaces dedicated to Black and Latina women, amplifying narratives of legacy, liberation, and love outside of romantic partnership.
Redefining the Bride Archetype
In a world that often pressures women to define themselves through marriage or motherhood by a certain age, The Sisterhood Wedding dares to reframe the role of the bride entirely.
“We spend so much time waiting for love to look a certain way,” Kaky says. “But I’ve realized that love is already here, in our friendships, in our families, in ourselves. This wedding honors that.”
The celebration is already attracting attention for its cinematic concept and bold message. Kaky is documenting the journey in behind-the-scenes content, giving audiences an intimate look at the planning process and emotional milestones leading up to the event. That footage could be developed into future media projects.
A Defining Moment for KDE And for Women Everywhere
“This isn’t just about me,” Kaky declares. “It’s about every woman who’s done waiting to be celebrated. We’re done waiting.”
With The Sisterhood Wedding, KDE Events is not just producing another luxury affair, it is staging a cultural statement, one that challenges societal expectations, honors the bonds of womanhood, and redefines the meaning of “happily ever after.”
November in Cartagena will not be about a union between two people, it will be about a woman’s sacred union with herself, her sisters, and the legacy of love they all carry.