Princess in Queen’s Vintage Gown for Private Wedding & Sir Tom’s Special Ceremony

I am back with a quick post on two topics that do not include the Duchess of Cambridge, stories people expressed a sizable amount of interest in on social media and via email. They are Princess Beatrice’s wedding yesterday (a surprise!) and a followup to our coverage of the amazing World War II veteran, Captain Tom Moore.   

We begin with news that Princess Beatrice of York and Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi were married yesterday at 11am in a small family ceremony. The duo opted for a private event with just a few family members present, adhering to government guidelines.

The couple announced their engagement last September. The wedding was originally slated for May 29 of this year at the Chapel Royal at St. James’s Palace but was postponed because of the impact of the coronavirus.

Yesterday’s ceremony was held at the Royal Chapel of All Saints at Royal Lodge in Windsor.  

The Queen attended the wedding with the Duke of Edinburgh.

The Princess wore a vintage Norman Hartnell dress that was on loan from The Queen. 

The dress is made from Peau De Soie taffeta in shades of ivory, trimmed with ivory Duchess satin, with organza sleeves. It is encrusted with diamanté and has a geometric checkered bodice. It was remodelled and fitted by Miss Angela Kelly and Mr. Stewart Parvin.

With thanks to Patricia Treble, the gown was worn for the 1966 State Opening of Parliament, seen below in a screengrab from a British Pathé film on the event.  

It was also worn for the December 1962 premiere of Lawrence of Arabia at the Odeon in Leicester Square. 

Norman Hartnell’s association with HM and other royal family members was significant, with the designer creating many pieces for historic occasions. Mr. Hartnell designed The Queen’s wedding gown seen below.

He also created the Queen’s coronation gown. More about Mr. Hartnell’s work for HM via this Daily Telegraph story by Emily Cronin. 

And when Queen Elizabeth commissioned him to create a 30-dress wardrobe for her 1938 royal tour to France, he swerved away from the prevailing trend for lean, liberated designs and resurrected the crinoline for a set of dresses that proved a sensation in Paris and worldwide.

What followed was a remarkable collaboration that would reshape the way the royals presented themselves to the world. Princess Elizabeth’s wedding gown, with its thousands of crystal beads and seed pearls, was a prelude to the coronation gown five years later, one of the most important dresses of the 20th century.

The Queen asked him to model the gown on her wedding dress, and to incorporate British and Commonwealth symbols (English roses, Welsh leeks, Scottish thistles and more) in the design. The embroidery alone took six artisans 3,000 hours to create. After the coronation, he designed gowns for many of the Queen’s most important state visits.

Hartnell became “the first fashion knight” when the Queen Mother invested him KCVO in 1977. He continued designing for her almost until his death in 1979, while also dressing Princess Anne, the fourth generation of royal women to wear his designs.

Mr. Hartnell designed Princess Margaret’s gown for her marriage to Anthony Armstrong Jones in 1960.  Below, other pieces by the designer for HM, shared by the Royal Collection Trust. The turquoise ensemble on the right was worn by The Queen for Princess Margaret’s wedding.

The Queen loaned the Princess another item, Queen Mary’s Fringe Tiara.

It is the same tiara worn by Her Majesty on her wedding day in 1947.  More about the piece from The Royal Order of Splendor

Queen Mary’s Fringe Tiara was made by E. Wolff & Co. for Garrard & Co. in 1919 and includes 47 diamond bars separated by smaller diamond spikes. 

In 1936, Queen Mary gave her fringe tiara to Queen Elizabeth, who wore it regularly during George VI’s reign. Queen Elizabeth loaned the tiara to her daughter, Princess Elizabeth (now, of course, Queen Elizabeth II), to wear when she married Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten on November 20, 1947.

There was a bit of a hiccup with the tiara on the big day in 1947; The Telegraph has more in this 2017 story

On the morning of the wedding, as the hairdresser was securing Elizabeth’s veil with the tiara, the antique metal frame snapped. According to Garrard, the Queen Mother consoled her daughter by saying “we have two hours and there are other tiaras,” but Elizabeth was intent on wearing that particular piece.

Fortunately, a court jeweller was on standby in the event of any such mishap and took the tiara via police escort to the Garrard workshop to be repaired. After emergency welding the tiara was returned to the bride, with just a slight noticeable gap between the central fringe and the spike to its right.

Princess Anne also wore the tiara for her 1973 wedding to Captain Mark Phillips.  

Princess Beatrice’s wedding ring was designed by Shaun Leane, who also did her engagement ring seen below.

In an Instagram post, Mr. Leane said, “I feel very honoured to have been a part of their journey and to have been involved in the very special moments of designing and creating the engagement ring and wedding ring. I wish them a lifetime of love and happiness together.” 

Mr. Mapelli Mozzi’s ring is a vintage gold band designed by Josh Collins of G. Collins and Sons, royal warrant holders whose work is favored by many members of the royal family.

The bride’s bouquet was by Patrice Van Helden, co-owner of RVH Floral Design. It included “trailing jasmine, pale pink and cream sweet peas, royal porcelain ivory spray roses, pink O’Hara garden roses, pink waxflower, and baby pink astilbe. In keeping with Royal tradition sprigs of myrtle were included in the bouquet.”  The same flowers were used for the beautiful arrangements covering the arched doorway at the chapel. 

Princess Beatrice’s bouquet has been placed on the tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey.

More about the service itself from a Palace news release: 

The service included two of the couple’s favourite poems, read by their Mothers, and a biblical reading. These were; Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare; “I carry you in my heart” by E.E. Cummings; and St. Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians Chapter 13, verses 1-13. Prayers were said. In accordance with government guidelines, no hymns were sung, but a selection of music was played. The National Anthem was played but not sung.

In addition to HM and the Duke of Edinburgh, Princess the ceremony was also attended by the couple’s parents and siblings. Prince Andrew walked Beatrice down the aisle; Princess Eugenie is reported to have been Maid of Honour and Mr. Mapelli Mozzi’s four-year-old son Wolfie was best man and pageboy.

Following the ceremony, The Daily Mail reports “A small party was held… at Royal Lodge, Prince Andrew and Sarah, Duchess of York’s Windsor home, with many of the 20 guests staying overnight – some in glamping pods outdoors.” 

Stephanie Petit reports on Beatrice’s new title in this People story

“…likely be styled now as ‘Her Royal Highness Princess Beatrice, Mrs. Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi.'”

Edoardo descends from Italian aristocracy — which means that Princess Beatrice is now an Italian “Contessa” and “Nobile Donna,” or noble woman.

Edoardo’s father is Count Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi, and as his oldest son, Edoardo will inherit the family’s ancestral seat, the 18th-century Villa Mapelli Mozzi palace in northern Italy.

What a delight to see Princess Beatrice in a repurposed piece of HM’s, as well as Queen Mary’s tiara. Congratulations to the newlyweds! 

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

It turns out the wedding was not The Queen’s only engagement yesterday.  HM’s other appointment is part of a followup on a story we first told you about back in April, the extraordinary fundraising effort for the NHS by Captain Tom Moore.  The Captain is a World War II veteran who wanted to raise money for the Health Service by walking 100 lengths of his back garden.

As many are aware, the Captain was a remarkable fundraiser, ultimately bringing in donations totaling more than £33 million, or roughly $40 million!  More from the BBC:

Capt Sir Tom, who was given the honorary title of colonel on his 100th birthday, had initially set out to raise £1,000 for NHS charities by repeatedly walking an 82ft (25m) loop of his garden.

But he eventually raised £32,794,701 from more than one-and-a-half million supporters.

But it is now “Captain Sir Tom Moore,” as the veteran was knighted yesterday. Richard Palmer shared a video of the centenarian arriving for his ceremony.

Below, The Queen and Captain Tom at Windsor Castle.

The BBC reports The Queen used the sword that belonged to her father, George VI, to bestow the insignia of Knight Bachelor upon Captain Sir Tom.

Richard also tweeted a video of the ceremony. 

 While other investitures have been put on hold because of the pandemic, this unique ceremony was specially arranged to take place at Windsor. Below, the two World War II veterans having a chat after the ceremony.

The veteran, now 100-years-old, said, “I am absolutely overawed.”  

The Captain was accompanied by family at the ceremony, including his daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore, son-in-law Colin Ingram, his grandson Benjie and granddaughter Georgia.

What a terrific story, very much needed at this point in time, at least in these quarters. I hope it also helps put a smile on your face. 

VIDEO

This 9-minute piece from British Pathé covers the State Opening in 1966 and is a treat to watch.  

 

LINKAGE

  • The Telegraph piece about Norman Hartnell is here; a Harper’s Bazaar story about the Queen’s Coronation gown is here; for the Royal Collection Trust’s information and photos of HM’s wedding gown and accessories, click here
  • For The Royal Order of Splendor post on Queen Mary’s Fringe Tiara, click here; for The Telegraph’s piece on the tiara, click here; the Court Jeweler’s coverage of the tiara is here
  • The Daily Mail’s wedding coverage is here; Hannah Furness’s story for The Telegraph is here;
  • Hello’s coverage of the wedding is here; a People article is here; the Evening Standard’s article is here; a BBC story is here
  • The Mirror’s piece about the flowers is here; a Town and Country story about the flowers is here; see Martyn Crossley’s photos of some of the other royal bouquets they have created by clicking here; an Express piece focused on the fashion elements of the wedding is here

The post Princess in Queen’s Vintage Gown for Private Wedding & Sir Tom’s Special Ceremony appeared first on What Kate Wore.



from What Kate Wore https://ift.tt/2WyG6QO
Reactions

Post a Comment

0 Comments