Far from red carpets and recording studios, Blake Shelton built the most meaningful symbol of his life in silence. Tucked deep inside his 1,300-acre Ten Point Ranch near Tishomingo, the country star created something no amount of fame could substitute: a place meant for one person.
That person was Gwen Stefani.
The ranch, sprawling across managed wilderness and rolling Oklahoma hills, is intentionally understated at its core. Shelton’s primary residence on the property is a modest four-bedroom home—comfortable, practical, and worlds away from celebrity excess. But the true heart of Ten Point Ranch isn’t the house. It’s what sits above it.
At the top of a secluded hill stands a small white chapel, built specifically for Stefani. Shelton didn’t outsource the project or treat it as a decorative feature. He personally oversaw the construction, working with builders and shaping the structure to reflect both Stefani’s faith and his own desire for permanence. Simple, traditional, and intimate, the chapel blends naturally into the land, framed by open sky and distant treelines.
In July 2021, the couple exchanged vows there, away from paparazzi and spectacle. The ceremony was officiated by their longtime friend Carson Daly, with only close family present. No grand entrance. No celebrity crowd. Just a promise made on land Shelton had already devoted to her.
Leading up to the chapel is one of the ranch’s most quietly intentional details: two perfectly symmetrical rows of trees lining the path. Locals call them the “guard trees.” They form a natural corridor—both protective and ceremonial—guiding visitors toward the hilltop while shielding the chapel from view. It’s privacy by design, rooted in nature rather than walls.
The ranch itself is named after a ten-point buck, a nod to Shelton’s love of hunting and conservation. Over the years, he has carefully managed the land to support native wildlife, often sharing glimpses of tractor work, field prep, and land stewardship. Under Stefani’s influence, the rugged terrain has softened in places with expansive flower gardens—bursts of color against Oklahoma earth.
Ten Point Ranch has become the couple’s anchor. It’s where Stefani traded stage heels for boots, where Shelton stepped fully into a life shaped by land rather than schedules. The property has also doubled as a creative backdrop, appearing in acoustic performances and visual projects that capture sunset light rather than studio gloss.
For Shelton, the chapel wasn’t just about a wedding day. It was about intention. About building something permanent in a world that rarely stands still.
“I built this for her,” he has said.
And there it remains—quiet, elevated, and unmoved by fame—watching over a marriage that began not under spotlights, but under open Oklahoma sky.