This weekend saw Queen Elizabeth II celebrate her official birthday with Trooping the Colour, though this year it was very different to say the least.
Instead of the usual fanfare and parade, the Welsh Guard performed a pared back ceremony, which The Queen watched at a safe distance.
One thing that the monarch didn’t tone down though was her outfit, and she donned her usual colourful attire for the occasion.
Whilst last year she had opted for a more muted pink, this year she went for a pale blue-green brocade suit by one of her favourite designers, Stewart Parvin.
She wore a statement Rachel Trevor-Morgan hat to match, and of course accessorised with her pearl necklace and earrings.
Queen Elizabeth II also wore a brooch, and as with many she has worn in the past, it wasn’t without its own significance – just recently she wore her grandmother’s brooch for her televised Coronavirus address.
The particular style she wore at the weekend was a diamond leek, which is the symbol of the Welsh Guards, who of course performed this weekend.

It’s a bit of a departure from her usual piece of choice, the Grenadier Guards’ Badge, which she wears each year for the Trooping the Colour celebrations.
The badge features a leek for the Welsh Guards, a thistle for the Scots Guards’, St George’s Cross for the Coldstream Guard and a shamrock for the Irish one.
It’s thought the Queen chose the leek to single the Welsh Guard out on this occasion.
The post The Queen changed this aspect of her Trooping the Colour outfit for the first time in years appeared first on Marie Claire.
from Marie Claire https://ift.tt/30IKRtP

Did you watch Her Majesty’s Official Birthday ceremony at Windsor Castle this morning? Typically, the Sovereign’s Official Birthday is marked with a Parade called Trooping of the Colour. This year, for the first time since 1955, Trooping of the Colour didn’t take place in its traditional form. Instead, the @welshguards performed a pared back ceremony for The Queen, with music from the Band of the @householddivision. Her Majesty, the Battalion’s Colonel-in-Chief, took the Royal Salute at the ceremony and watched a series of military drills – swipe to see a timelapse of this morning’s impressive display. Copyright: Press Association / @ministryofdefence
0 Comments