Photo albums are the default because they're familiar, not because they're the best option. If you're weighing how to actually preserve your wedding day in a way you'll revisit, here's a rundown of what's out there.
1. The classic printed photo album
Reliable, tactile, and it never needs charging. The downside: it only captures still frames. No sound, no motion — the vows, the laughter, the first dance, all reduced to poses.
2. A cloud photo/video folder
Free (or close to it) and technically holds everything — video included. The problem is nobody visits it. A shared Google Drive folder is where memories go to be forgotten, because revisiting it requires you to remember it exists and go looking.
3. A USB drive or hard drive
Slightly better than cloud storage because it's physical, but you still need a device to plug it into, and it degrades or gets misplaced. Not something you casually hand to a grandparent.
4. A wedding highlight video, unwatched
Plenty of couples pay for a videographer, get a beautifully edited film, and then watch it exactly once — at the wedding, or shortly after. It lives in a folder or a private link that nobody thinks to open again.
5. A video book
This is the format built specifically to solve the "nobody revisits it" problem. It's a physical object — something that sits on a shelf like a photo album — but it has a screen built in. Open the cover, and your wedding film plays immediately. No searching for a file, no casting to a TV, no remembering a password to some cloud account.
The reason this format works where the others fall short is friction. Every other option requires a small amount of effort to revisit: find the drive, open the app, remember the link. A video book requires none. You pick it up like a book, and it plays like a video.
If you have raw footage sitting across your phone and a few guests' cameras, you can upload it and have it edited into a film. If you already have a finished wedding video, you can upload it as-is and have it loaded straight onto the device. Either way, it turns into the one format on this list that people actually go back to.