Twin Wedding: Identical Twins Marry Identical Twins, One Couple Has Identical Twin Sons

Twins Marry Twins In Outrageous Double Wedding
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While growing up, identical twins Diane and Darlene Nettemeier always did everything together. When they got married, they continued the trend and tied the knot in a double wedding -- to another set of identical twins!

Diane and Darlene shared their story on "The Jeff Probst Show" Thursday with their husbands, Craig and Mark Sanders, whom they met at the Twinsburg, Ohio, twin convention in 1998. The two couples now live next door to each other, and Craig and Diane even have identical twin sons.

The twins told Probst that after meeting at the twin convention, they instantly paired off -- Craig with Diane and Mark with Darlene. The brothers proposed on the same day -- with the same style of engagement ring -- and in 1999, the two couples married in a joint wedding. The sisters wore identical dresses, and their father even walked them both down the aisle at the same time, Diane told "The Today Show" on Wednesday.

“It was fun shopping for dresses, because she would take half and I would take half, and we would try them on,’’ Diane said. “If it didn’t look good on her, it wasn’t going to look good on me.’’

After the wedding, the two couples decided to look for homes in the same area. Craig told the New York Daily News Sunday that although he and Mark had lived in different cities for six years, Diane and Darlene had never spent more than a day apart.

“If we lived 50 miles away from each other, [the sisters] would want to visit each other all the time,” Craig said.

They ended up buying two homes next to each other in Houston, and their kids share an adjoining backyard. Craig and Diane have identical twin sons and another son, while Mark and Darlene have two daughters.

Watch the video above for more on the twins.

Whether on purpose or by accident, some twins end up going through major life events at the same time; these twins gave birth two hours apart. In 2008, a British couple made headlines when they asked for an annulment after discovering they were twins.

Read crazy wedding stories from "Ripley's Believe It Or Not" in the slideshow below.

Wacky Wedding Stories From Ripley's Believe It Or Not!
Vast Veil(01 of06)
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For her wedding to Ferdinand Pucci near Naples, Italy, bride Elena De Angelis wore the world's longest wedding veil, measuring a staggering 1.8 miles long. The white silk veil, which was six and half feet wide, took months to make and needed a staggering 600 people to carry it. The village of Casal di Principe came to a standstill as hundreds of people turned out to help De Angelis along the streets to the church. Her veil was so long, it would take Olympian Usain Bolt racing at world-record speed nearly five minutes to run its length. (credit:Shutterstock)
Fated to Marry(02 of06)
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Amy Singley and Steven Smith of Bushkill Township, Pennsylvania, were born at the same hospital on the same day in 1986 -- and their mothers even shared a hospital room. On June 12, 2010, the 24-year-olds married. (credit:Shutterstock)
Wedding Machine(03 of06)
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In 2011, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum in Detroit, Michigan, bought a new vending machine that enables couples to get married for just $1. Devised by British company Concept Shed, the AutoWed has a robotic voice that takes couples through their vows, at the end of which they either press one button for "I do" or another for "Escape." At the end, they get a wedding receipt and two plastic rings. (credit:Shutterstock)
Wet Guests(04 of06)
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Eva and Pavel Jaworzno got engaged and married underwater. Their August 2011 wedding ceremony took place in a flooded open-pit mine in southern Poland. They took the plunge with 275 guests, making their nuptials the world's largest underwater wedding. (credit:Shutterstock)
Popped the Question(05 of06)
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For her wedding to Duncan Turner, schoolteacher Rachael Robinson from Lincolnshire, England, wore a dress made from bubble wrap. The dress and train were made out of 13 feet of the packing material by pupils and parents from her school. The sheets of bubble wrap were stitched together, attached to an inner lining of cloth, and topped off with white packing foam and candies. (credit:Shutterstock)
Nipple Dress(06 of06)
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At the 2011 London Fashion Week, Liverpool designer Rachel Freire unveiled a rose-covered dress made of 3,000 real cow nipples. Created from patches of leather recovered from tanneries, the dress was part of her Nippleocalypse collection, which also featured a bra made from layers of protruding nipples. (credit:Shutterstock)

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Clarification: The headline has been amended to better reflect the parentage of the twin sons.

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