This Kyoto Wedding Ended With a Rock ’n’ Roll-Themed After-Party in an Old Metro Station

Indonesian actor Brandon Salim and Rahasia Gadis founder Dhika Himawan had a very Gen Z beginning to their love story: they met via DM. As Dhika puts it: “From a simple ‘Hi’ to the altar!” Dhika originally thought Brandon was reaching out to her to collaborate on an NFT project she was working on. “Turns out he just saw me from a friend’s IG story and thought I was cute,” she laughs. Once they connected, the two realized they actually had a shared history that helped bring them closer together. “Our parents are both really good friends with Sebastian Gunawan—an Indonesian legendary designer who ended up designing all of my dresses for the wedding,” Dhika explains.
In April 2024, Brandon surprised Dhika with a proposal while she was traveling in Japan. “Every year, I would go to Mount Fuji in Japan to pray at Taisekiji Temple, the head temple of the Japanese Buddhist religion, Nichiren Shoshu. Brandon surprised me all the way from Indonesia,” she explains. Brandon snuck into her hotel room dressed as his favorite Ghibli character—Jiro Horikoshi from The Wind Rises—and knelt outside her bathroom door. “I walked out in my pajamas and wet hair, certainly not ready for the camera he stationed somewhere inside the room,” she remembers. “So, I said yes in my pajamas and him in a Jiro Horikoshi suit in spring in Japan—the best way we could have imagined.” The two toasted to their engagement after at an izakaya over beer.
When it came to their marriage celebration, the newly engaged couple decided to honor their families by hosting two weddings—one in Indonesia and a second one in Kyoto. “We officially got married at a temple in Jakarta on April 19, 2025, followed by a Chinese-Indonesian tea ceremony and a reception dinner,” shares Dhika. “The day was dedicated to our extended families and friends—almost 1000 of them!” The Kyoto ceremony is what the couple describes as their “dream wedding” with a much more intimate guest list of 160 friends and family members. “My Japanese heritage is one I feel furthest and closest to at the same time,” notes Dhika. “My late grandmother was Japanese-Indonesian, but I didn t get to meet any of my Japanese family members. I always wondered what it feels like to be close to them.” On May 29, 2025, they brought their guests to Shogunzuka Seiryuden Temple, an 800-year-old heritage site at the top of Kyoto’s hills with incredible views of the city.
The bride shares that Brandon served as creative director for the wedding. “Honestly, I am lucky Brandon was super involved with the process,” she says. “He took over documentation, music, venue, entertainment, designs—all the creative parts.” Dhika says she managed hospitality, food, alcohol, logistics, decor, and production. “I think we did well together! It was like passing a test before marriage,” she jokes. They were supported in their planning by Poetyque Events and Yukari Ueno Experiences.
One unique project the couple took on was creating a signature perfume for their wedding day. “Since I own a fragrance brand, we started working with a Japanese perfumer and Brandon’s mother (who is also a perfumer) to create one unisex scent that we both could wear on the day,” Dhika shares. They named the perfume Ceremony 29 as a nod to their wedding date. “Our main note was hinoki, a Japanese woody scent that represented Kyoto’s wooden homes or machiya.” All guests received the fragrance as a favor, and Dhika ended up releasing the scent with her brand after the wedding.
When deciding on her wedding attire, the bride collaborated exclusively with designer Sebastian Gunawan. “This was the easiest part of the whole wedding process,” she shares. “He’s been dressing me since I was eight! I felt like he knew me best. I had blindfolds on and completely trusted him.” For their wedding in Jakarta, Gunawan designed Dhika two looks that served as representations of both her Indonesian and Chinese heritage. “In Kyoto, he highlighted my Japanese heritage by designing a Japanese obi-inspired back with florals on my ceremonial two-piece bridal couture,” she describes. For jewelry, she kept her hair knotted with a Japanese hairpin and wore tennis bracelets gifted by Brandon’s mother. “I wanted my neckline to be clear of any jewelry to highlight the shape of the gown,” the bride adds. One additional look in her wardrobe? “During our welcome dinner, I chose to wear my mother’s Sebastian Gunawan vintage dress from 20 years ago that he designed for her.” Brandon also chose to wear a suit designed by a longtime family favorite, Lim’s Tailor.
The couple also had their wedding party outfitted for the day. Dhika asked her bridesmaids to choose mismatched dresses in hues of butter yellow and sage green. “I wanted each bridesmaid to have their own style,” she says. They pulled pieces from Reformation and had custom styles created by Indonesian seamstresses for the party. The groomsmen wore suits with matching loafers and ties.
The celebrations kicked off with a welcome party at The Ritz-Carlton Kyoto, where the guests all stayed for the weekend. “Afterwards, we went bar hopping in Kyoto’s famous Pontocho Alley,” adds the bride. The next day, the couple and their guests gathered on the deck of Shogunzuka Seiryuden Temple for the ceremony. “We wanted to have a 360 view of all our guests, so we had the layout circle around the center platform,” says Dhika. Florals were placed around the space in reflective water vessels crafted by This Humid House. A musical ensemble set the tone with instrumentals by Joe Hisaishi, Ghibli’s composer and music director, before Dhika made her entrance to “First Love” by Utada Hikaru.
The couple describes the ceremony as very intimate. Brandon’s father, actor Ferry Salim, served as officiant for the proceedings and “gave a little dad speech to us,” says the bride. The couple then recited their own vows before sealing their marriage with a kiss. The deck transformed for cocktail hour, where the newlyweds and their guests took in the last light of the day. “We enjoyed blue hour together on the deck, with cocktails, wine, and delicious local snacks, while taking in sweeping views of Kyoto,” shares Dhika. “As the sun set, we watched the city slowly light up below us, which felt incredibly magical and peaceful—the perfect way to transition from the ceremony into the evening celebrations.”
Before entering the temple for the reception, the newlyweds took a moment to watch their guests mingle. “It was truly magical to see what we had planned for a year come to life,” describes Dhika. “Our closest family and friends came all the way to Japan for us! Some even flew 18 hours just to spend the weekend. That was the most important part.” Food was a highlight of the reception, with bento boxes, sashimi, Japanese beef, and unagi chirashi bowls from The Ritz-Carlton Kyoto on the menu. “I thought I’d be too nervous or occupied to eat, but I ended up finishing all the courses,” shares the bride.
The party moved underground to the oldest club in Japan, Club Metro. The after-party had a rock ‘n’ roll theme, and all the guests swapped their attire to party into the night. “We also invited Brandon s favorite Japanese indie rock band, Galileo Galilei, to perform! Brandon gave a surprise performance with them, too,” adds Dhika.
Reflecting on the Kyoto festivities, the couple notes that they are simply filled with gratitude: “When I see the photos, I could feel the warmth of that day all over again.”


