Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco made their love known after their wedding last month.
The newlyweds reportedly celebrated their wedding with a “perfect” honeymoon – a road trip around the California and Texas coasts.
“They loved their little honeymoon,” a source told People Friday. “They celebrated for many days during their wedding and were in great spirits. They really enjoyed slowing down and going on road trips to explore and relax. They drove around the Cali coast and even visited Texas.”
“It was perfect,” the source added.
Representatives for Gomez and Blanco did not immediately respond to Page Six’s requests for comment.
The “Love You Like a Love Song” songstress, 33, exchanged vows on a swing set in front of about 170 family and friends at the lush Seacrest Nursery School in Santa Barbara, Calif., on Sept. 27.
The bride wore a custom halterneck satin dress with hand draping and embroidery by Ralph Lauren for her big day.
Her now husband, 37, also wore a Ralph Lauren look, complete with a classic black tuxedo and bow tie.
Guests included Gomez’s “Only Murders in the Building” co-stars Martin Short, Steve Martin, Paul Rudd, and longtime girlfriend Taylor Swift.
Other attendees included Paris Hilton, Ed Sheeran, Ashley Park and Gomez’s Wizards of Waverly Place co-star Jennifer Stone.
After the main ceremony, the Disney Channel alum changed into a romantic, vintage-style Ralph Lauren off-the-shoulder midi dress for the reception, where she danced barefoot with her groom.
In a photo shared to Gomez’s Instagram, the happy couple toasted to their wedding day bliss with a simple cake that read “Just Wedding” and had a bride and groom topper.
Gomez attended Fortune magazine’s “Most Powerful Women” conference in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, returning to work after her marriage.
She spoke to the crowd about her wedding day anxiety, saying she “sobbed” after she and Blanco were married and feared the worst would happen.
“This is how I personally work, but when something great happens in your life, you expect something bad to happen,” she told the audience.
“So instead of sitting there and saying, ‘Okay, we did something amazing,’ that’s what I do, too. I’m always thinking, ‘Okay, but tomorrow it could all be gone, so how can I make sure that doesn’t happen?'” she said.