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United Kingdom

Bride covered in paint by ‘liar’ sister-in-law says her brother has been ‘brainwashed’

News RoomBy News RoomMay 2, 2026
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The dream of a perfect wedding day was violently shattered for Gemma Monk when a moment of profound betrayal unfolded at the altar. In May 2024, as the 35-year-old bride stood ready to exchange vows, her sister-in-law, Antonia Eastwood, 49, hurled black paint across her cherished £1,800 gown. The act, captured in shocking CCTV footage, was a deliberate escalation of a bitter family feud, reducing guests to tears of disbelief and turning a celebration of love into a scene of public humiliation. The wedding ceremony, held at Oakwood House, was forcibly suspended, the radiant symbol of Gemma’s new beginning now grotesquely defaced. In that instant, the fabric of her family was torn apart just as irrevocably as the satin and lace of her dress.

The immediate aftermath was a blur of shock and surreal crisis management. An usher, who fortuitously owned a pre-owned wedding dress shop, stepped in to provide a replacement gown, allowing the ceremony to resume two hours later. Yet, for Gemma, the day passed in a traumatized daze. She admits she “doesn’t remember” saying her vows to her husband, describing the sensation as watching herself from above, utterly detached from what should have been the most poignant moment of her life. The physical stain was temporary, but the psychological imprint was deep and immediate. The wedding proceeded, but the marriage, in the emotional sense she had yearned for, felt stolen before it had even begun.

The fallout has been a relentless “mental torture” for Gemma. In the months since, the incident has attracted international attention, culminating in Eastwood’s recent conviction for criminal damage. Gemma wrestles with the bizarre cruelty of the act, rejecting Eastwood’s claims that it was revenge for being called names or tripped at her own wedding—an accusation Gemma dismisses as an “obvious lie,” noting her own petite stature makes the latter claim particularly absurd. The premeditated nature of the attack, which required navigating a confusing ring road to a specific venue with a tin of paint, underscores its malicious intent. For Gemma, the central, agonizing question remains: “I did nothing wrong.” This violation of trust and ritual has left her questioning her own reality, waking up wondering, “is that real?”

Perhaps the most painful casualty has been her relationship with her brother, Ashley, Eastwood’s husband. Gemma speaks of a lifelong bond where her brother was always her protector. His alignment with his wife in the feud and the events of the wedding day has been a heartbreak that eclipses even the public disgrace. “My brother is meant to protect me,” she laments, feeling he has been “totally brainwashed” and stating she will “never forgive him.” This familial fracture is a wound that continues to bleed, a permanent loss layered on top of the public humiliation. The paint was thrown by her sister-in-law, but the deepest cut came from her brother’s perceived abandonment.

Determined to reclaim her narrative and her joy, Gemma is now planning a profound act of healing: a second wedding ceremony. Her vision is to “override” the traumatic memory, not to erase it, but to build a new, happy one atop it. She and her husband plan to marry again at the exact same venue on the same date in 2027, creating a fresh anniversary for themselves and their children. “I’d like to override that memory for myself and my children so we can look back at the day and have a happy memory,” she explains. Currently, their anniversary is a date she cannot bear to celebrate, a marker of pain rather than love. “Yes, I am married, but I don’t feel married,” she confesses, hoping this symbolic renewal will finally grant her the feeling of union that was so violently interrupted.

The path to this new beginning involves both practical and emotional safeguards. Gemma acknowledges she would consider hiring security for the event and ensuring a larger, unwavering support network is present. While reluctant to accept charity, her family has set up a GoFundMe to help her “rewrite” her wedding day, funds that will go toward the ceremony and replacing other items ruined by the paint. This public support stands in stark contrast to the very public violation she endured. Gemma Monk’s story is thus moving from one of victimhood to one of reclamation. It is a testament to the human spirit’s desire to mend, to find beauty after brutality, and to insist on a happy ending, even when you have to painstakingly create it for yourself.

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