"A royal wedding like no other" is the claim of many front pages which splash official photos of the "lockdown" wedding of Princess Beatrice and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi.
The Mail on Sunday reveals the bridal dress was first worn by the Queen in 1962, and that the event featured glamping pods and a bouncy castle.
For many papers though, the focus is the absence of the bride's father from the official snaps, which picture only the Queen and Duke of Edinburgh alongside the happy couple. "Where's Dad?" asks the Sunday Mirror, while the Sunday People notes: "At least granny's allowed."
The main focus for The Sunday Telegraph is its interview with Boris Johnson, with the PM playing down any suggestion that there could be another national lockdown because of coronavirus.
Mr Johnson is pictured with his fiancee and son for the piece, which marks a year since he took office and he discloses that he is feeling much healthier since shedding a stone and a half whilst battling Covid himself.
Concerns about NHS Test and Trace make the lead online for The Independent. It claims to have obtained leaked analysis which shows the service is failing to reach more than half the contacts named by infected residents in the current outbreak in Blackburn.
The analysis was carried out by the public health director for the area, Professor Dominic Harrison.
The Independent says the findings have left officials scrambling this weekend to put in place new local contact tracing as fears grow the outbreak could get worse - and lead to a Leicester-style local lockdown.
Similar concerns occupy The Telegraph's front page. "Test and Trace would not cope with a second wave" is the claim as the paper reports that, in an industry briefing, Alex Cooper - an official responsible for part of the government's national testing programme - revealed that the system was only identifying 37% of those it should be.
In response the government said the test and trace system had already isolated 180,000 cases, helping to control spread, prevent a second wave, and save lives.