Windsor Wedding, Thirty Years On

 Thirty years ago yesterday, the Duke and Duchess of Kent’s eldest son, George Windsor, Earl of St. Andrews, was married to Canadian professor Sylvana Tomaselli. At the time of the nuptials, the bride was Catholic and divorced, issues which prevented a church wedding and caused the Earl to give up his rights of succession (thankfully, times have changed).  As such, a civil wedding was required and the young couple married in Scotland.

We don’t see many British royal weddings where the bride is not in a gown and veil but the unique circumstances at the time of this one made the bride opt for a suit and hat. Sylvana topped her royal blue dotted velvet suit and muff with a matching hat in matching silk. The tall, upfolded bumper brim gave the design a relaxed Cossack shape and the hat was simply trimmed with a large button in the same dotted velvet as Sylvana’s suit. The pieces combined to give a glamorous winter ensemble with luxurious texture and beautiful sheen.

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The Duchess of Kent went with a more traditionally shaped Cossack style hat in crimson, trimmed with wide black velvet ribbon piping and a giant bow at the back (perhaps anchored to her hair, below the hat?). Lady Helen Windsor, as was her title at the time, was also in red and black- her red cloche variation was trimmed with black brim piping and a wide velvet hatband and bow. 

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Barely visible at the far left of the photo below, Princess Alexandra looked to be wearing a brown fur papakha style hat. On the far right, Princess Michael of Kent wore an oversize, angular black brimless hat (perhaps also a modified Cossack shape?) with bow. 

In combination, these hats always seemed like a technicolor Russian winter fantasy to me. We don’t often see tall Cossack shapes on royal heads, making this group all the more memorable. Thirty years on, what do you think of these hats?
Photos from Getty as indicated

Inventory: Duchess of Cambridge’s Red Hats

The Duchess of Cambridge celebrates her 36th birthday and in honor of this event, I thought we’d continue our inventory series with a peek at all of the different red designs in her millinery closet. Since beginning her royal life, Kate has worn four red hats- here they are in the order they were introduced:

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Designer: Silvia Fletcher for Lock and Co.; Rachel Trevor Morgan
First Worn: July 1, 2011;  September 25, 2011

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Designer: Silvia Fletcher for Lock and Co.; Gina Foster
First Worn: June 3, 2012;  April 7, 2014

UPDATE: Since this post was published, the Duchess has added the following red hats to her wardrobe:

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Designer: unconfirmed (likely Lock & Co.); Juliette Botterill
First Worn: March 11, 2018; July 7, 2019

Some of you may also remember Kate wearing this red silk rose and net fascinator of unknown design in April 2010 to a friend’s wedding. The piece has not made a reappearance since the royal engagement and I strongly suspect it is no longer in Kate’s wardrobe.

That leaves the four designs above on which to focus our discussion. The first one, studded with maple leaves and worn in Canada on our national holiday (something that endeared the new Duchess to us Canadians!) fits such a small and specific niche that a repeat appearance doesn’t seem likely. The remaining three are an interesting trio- despite all being small in scale, they follow distinctly different shapes. I adore the jaunty movement and bold trim of #3 and I think Kate does to, since she ordered a twin of this hat in blue for her second visit to Canada in 2016. The delicate rosette and leaf trim on #4 is also a lovely elevation to this classic pillbox, a shape that can sometimes be a little boring.

Red is a great colour on Kate and while I understand why, at this point in her royal life she often eschews fashion that draws attention, it would be lovely to see her add a few more red designs into rotation.

What do you think of Kate’s red hats?

Photos from Getty as indicated; GTRESONLINE; Chris Allerton/AFP via Getty; Mark Stewart/Camera Press

 

British Royals Attend Sunday Service

Queen Elizabeth, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge all attended Sunday service yesterday morning at church service at St. Mary Magdalene Church close to the Sandringham estate. The Queen repeated her magenta and black felt split crown hat with black button trim and embroidered black dots.

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The Duchess of Cambridge used the occasion to debut a new hat in warm brown alpaca fur. The cuffed brim design is a triplet to black and grey designs already in Kate’s wardrobe– this brown version rounds out a trio of neutrals that should pair with any number of winter coats. I can only imagine the hat is warm and comfortable for Kate to be adding this third version.

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Designer: Lecorine. It is the “Sumac” design 
Previously Worn: this hat is new
We’ve only had to wait seven days in this new year for our first new royal hat- what do you think of it?
Photos from Getty as indicated

This Week’s Extras

Royal Hats

Last Sunday’s outing to church saw repeated royal hats worn by Queen Elizabeth (in Angela Kelly), The Princess Royal (in a John Boyd cloche that dates back to at least 1984!) and the Countess of Wessex (in Philip Treacy).


Queen Margrethe and Prince Henrik wore eye-catching matching harlequin outfits to a costume party on New Year’s Day. Prince Henrik accessorised his suit with a black knit hat and mask.

New millinery designs that caught my eye this week:

Textured black calot/bandeau with feathers from Rachel Trevor Morgan
Ivory and ice blue percher with amazing ‘snowflake’ feathers from UK milliner Rachel Black
Forest green trilby with vintage ribbon flower from Vermont based Silverhill Creative Millinery
Ice blue felt percher with stunning quatrefoil patterned bow and feather from UK milliner Sally Ann Provan
Whimsical straw watermelon bumper hat by Milan milliners Gallia and Peter
Eye catching bright pink straw fedora with oversized metallic brim from Awon Golding
Statement cocktail hat from Jane Taylor with studded base, silk roses, straw twists and net veil

And this classic black straw hat with pork pie crown and gently sloped wide brim trimmed with overlapping ginea fowl feather hatband and pearls from Australian milliner Meg Rafter. There are several royal heads I can see looking fabulous in this hat.

 Royal Hats

Several lovely photo reviews of 2017 shared by Clarence House, Kensington Palace, and UK royal photographer Chris Jackson

Interesting documentary next Sunday on the British crown jewels including thoughts from the monarch herself (BBC)

Grand Duke Jean of Luxembourg celebrated his 97th birthday and a new photo, with Grand Duke Henri, was released for the occasion (Luxarazzi)

Wonderful photo shared by the King of Bhutan

Spanish royals released a partial family photo taken at King Juan Carlos’ 80th birthday lunch this week

New years greetings from the King and Queen of Jordan

Stunning looks on the Danish royals for the annual New Years and Diplomatic Corps receptions. Princess Mary’s ruby tiara has recently been tweaked into a shape with a slight peak at center and it looks great on her.



And a beautiful final sunset of 2017 paired with the first sunrise of 2018 shared by Prince Nikaloas of Greece. Happy New Year everyone!

Inventory: Countess of Wessex’s Red Hats

One of my goals for 2018 is to complete more royal hat wardrobe inventories. With no better time like the present to work at achieving this goal, we’re jumping in today with a look inside the Countess of Wessex’s millinery closet at all of her red hats. Red does not seem to be Sophie’s favourite colour as she has worn just three designs in this hue during the course of her royal life:

1.    2.Nov 19, 2007 in Philip Treacy | Royal Hats

Designer: unconfirmed; Philip Treacy
Introduced: April 4, 1999; November 19, 2007

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Designer: Rachel Trevor Morgan
Introduced: December 25, 2009

As far as I can determine, each one of these designs was worn only once, at the events pictured above. The shapes could not be more different, giving a most random look to this collection. The shape of #1 is outdated to current fashion sensibilities; the upswept brim of #2 is lovely but the harsh Homburg bumps on the crown seem at odds with the large flying bow. As lovely as #3 is in theory, its large scale and placement ends is simply awkward (bouquet plopped on head).  Seeing these hats reminds me of the time, prior to her wonderful collaboration with milliner Jane Taylor, when Sophie’s millinery looks more than occasionally looked like they were wearing her, instead of the desired opposite. I’d love to see what Jane Taylor would design for her today, in red.

Photos from Tim Graham, Tim Graham and Max Nash via Getty