Kate Middleton Re-Wore an Old Dress at the Royal Wedding, For the Third Time
What did Kate Middleton wear to Prince Harry and MeghanMarkle's wedding in Windsor? A white dress. But it wasn't a wedding fashion faux pas. It was, it seems, a deliberate choice to keep things simple and the attention off of herself and on the day's happy couple.
Eagle-eyed journalist Elizabeth Holmes pointed out on Twitter that the Duchess of Cambridge arrived at Windsor Castle "wearing a dress she has worn TWICE before. Charlotte's christening and the Queen's birthday. #RoyalWedding," further commenting, "Truly the nicest gesture she could show her now sister-in-law. Absolutely nothing to see here! Focus on the bride!"
Almost all of the comments on the tweet agree that Kate is a "class act" and a "lady" for eschewing the limelight on this day, though it's important to point out that this is very on brand for Kate, Duchess of the People. The white dress in question (Kate's, that is) is by Alexander McQueen, a favorite label of the mother-of-three's.
As for the other white gown in the room at St. George'sChapel, as you probably know, it's Givenchy silk (you can read all about the designer, Brit Clare Waight Keller, here) and complemented by a diamond tiara, diamond earrings, a long train and, finally, a wedding ring made of Welsh Gold from the Queen's own supply.
More examples of the royals being cute together? Sure, why not. Markle's bouquet includes flowers hand-picked by Prince Harry yesterday, as well as forget-me-nots, because they were his late mother Princess Diana's favorite flower. Yes, we are also crying, it's completely normal and nothing to be ashamed of.
Now here's the best GIF from the royal wedding, because you deserve it:
From Kate Middleton and Prince William to Charles and Diana (and Camilla), a Brief History of British Royal Weddings—And Their Attending Scandals
Original diva Queen Victoria might not have been the first bride to wear white, but she was the one who made a white gown something of a protocol. Victoria commissioned a white lace dress for her 1840 wedding to Prince Albert, intending to support the struggling lace-making industry and best showcase the textile. Further, she destroyed the pattern for her dress so it could not be replicated, and she decreed no one else could wear white to her wedding. After the ceremony, she and Albert—for whom London's Victoria and Albert museum is named—traveled to Windsor Castle for the night; though Albert had hoped to take a two-week honeymoon with his new wife, already the reigning queen, Victoria told him she could not take that much time off from work and they limited their vacation to just a few days.
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Between Victoria, which stars Jenna Coleman as the titular monarch, and The Crown, with Claire Foy as Elizabeth II, British royals' romances have been the subject of much pop culture fascination lately. Elizabeth, who was crowned queen in 1953, wore an elaborate dress by Norman Hartnell for her 1947 wedding to Phillip Mountbatten. If she resembles someone out of a Botticelli painting, that's precisely what the designer intended with the delicate floral embroidery and 10,000 seed pearls sewn into the design. It was just two years after the end of World War II, and austerity measures were still in place rationing fabric, buttons, and types of trim, so, reportedly, young women all over England sent their clothing coupons to Princess Elizabeth; with her own savings, plus a 200-coupon bonus from the government, she was able to afford the dress, which took six months to make. (*The Crown'*s reproduction cost a reported $37,000 and took seven weeks.)
Elizabeth's younger sister Princess Margaret married the photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, a contributor to Vogue andVanity Fair, on May 6, 1960. It was a lavish affair, costing a reported $65,000—not to mention the additional $115,000 of her seagoing honeymoon—that didn't do much to improve her reputation among her subjects. Margaret had previously been embroiled in scandal, engaging in an affair in the early '50s with Captain Peter Townsend, a war hero 15 years her elder, who happened to already be married. Townsend later divorced his wife, but Margaret was nevertheless unable to marry him because her religion—and the royal family's adherence to Catholicism—prohibited her from wedding someone who had previously been married. Still, her subsequent marriage to Armstrong-Jones ended in divorce in 1978.
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When Charles, Prince of Wales, was 24 years old, he met Camilla Parker Bowles. But, according to biographer Sally Bedell Smith, the prince was not yet ready to commit to marriage and gendered double standards of the mid-20th century meant Charles was expected to marry a woman who could plausibly present herself as a virgin. Cue Diana: Though Charles remained enamored of Bowles, he ended up marrying Diana Spencer, a woman 13 years younger whose grandmothers had been ladies-in-waiting to Charles's grandmother, Elizabeth, the queen mother, in 1976. They divorced in 1996, after both had engaged in affairs (Charles, picking up his relationship with Bowles again); Diana died in a car crash in 1997.
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