WEDDING FLOWERS: Tiara Thursday
News Update
Loading...
Showing posts with label Tiara Thursday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiara Thursday. Show all posts

Tiara Thursday: Queen Victoria's Orange Blossom Wreath

Queen Elizabeth II is on a state visit to Germany - which is being covered in full at the Vault - and she's really working the Saxe-Coburg and Gotha angle with jewels courtesy of Prince Albert and Queen Victoria (including a particularly spectacular turn at the state banquet last night). Today's feature, however, is one Victoria and Albert jewel that she won't be wearing.

Sentimentality ran high in Victorian era jewelry, including in the collection of the monarch that gave the era its name. Queen Victoria placed special significance on the all the jewelry that her husband, Prince Albert, gave her and designed for her. This was a great portion of her jewel collection, as Albert's eye for design took charge of the royal gems during his life. We've admired several of the tiaras to which his name was attached - Queen Victoria's Sapphire Coronet, her Emerald and Diamond Tiara, and her Oriental Circlet, for example - but none of those headpieces were quite as personal as her Orange Blossom Wreath.
Queen Victoria's Orange Blossom Parure (headdress, two brooches, and earrings)
As a present for their sixth wedding anniversary in February 1846, Albert gave Victoria a wreath of white porcelain orange blossoms with gold leaves on a braided black velvet band with a silk ribbon tie at the back. The wreath includes four oranges made from green enamel to represent the four children they had at that time, but that wasn't the only meaningful touch.
The selection of orange blossom was filled with significance for the couple. The flower represented chastity in the language of flowers; it was also associated with betrothal, as emphasized when Albert sent Victoria a brooch designed as a white porcelain and gold sprig of orange blossom after their engagement. Victoria wore fresh orange blossoms on their wedding day, and just as her gown created a trend for white wedding dresses, she started a trend for orange blossom jewelry. Albert turned his engagement gift into a parure (matched set) by giving her another brooch and a pair of matching earrings in December 1845. The wreath, given a couple months later, was the last piece of the parure.
Victoria and Albert, 1854. She may be wearing this wreath.
Queen Victoria loved the gift, writing in her diary that "it is such a lovely wreath & such a dear kind thought of Albert's." She wore pieces of the parure for all of their wedding anniversaries until Albert's death in 1861. After he died, she had the set placed on display in the room where he died at Windsor Castle. The orange blossom parure was not meant to be worn by anyone else, and so the pieces have not been; they are in the Royal Collection and are solely for display.

You can see the parure on display right now, as a matter of fact: Painting Paradise: The Art of the Garden at The Queen's Gallery at Buckingham Palace includes the orange blossom jewels and runs through October of this year. (Thank you to All That Glitters for the heads up!)

Photos: Royal Collection/Queen Elizabeth II / Wikimedia Commons

Tiara Thursday: Princess Sofia's Emerald and Diamond Tiara

There were plenty of rumors flying around that Sofia Hellqvist would get a new tiara for her wedding to Prince Carl Philip of Sweden. Those types of rumors are not uncommon before a big event, but it is uncommon that they turned out to be true. Sofia joined the ranks of brides in colorful tiaras as she walked down the aisle wearing a diamond and emerald tiara never before seen on the Swedish royal scene. Designed in the Art Deco style, it includes a series of graduated diamond palmette motifs topped by a set of graduated pear-shaped emeralds.
Princess Sofia's Emerald and Diamond Tiara
The royal court stated that the tiara was a gift from King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia to Princess Sofia. Unfortunately, no other information was given, and further questions about the tiara’s history - was it newly made for Sofia? An older piece purchased by the King and Queen? - remain unanswered. There has been much speculation, but opinions still differ. (Additionally, many wondered if the emeralds could be removed from the top and possibly replaced by other stones; from what we can see of the back, it doesn’t look like it is set up that way right now.)
A new tiara for a royal bride is an unusual thing these days, but this acquisition made a lot of sense in the context of the Swedish royal family’s tiara collection. In addition to the tiaras that belong to the family foundation and are available to borrow, most of the ladies in the family have tiaras of their own, whether they were eighteenth birthday gifts, inheritances, or pieces given to or designated for them otherwise. Sofia now has the same. And even though the court's statement indicates that it belongs to Sofia and not the family foundation, this is now the only emerald tiara in the family – something that was a notable omission for such a large collection.
Needless to say, I’m very curious to see how Sofia wears the tiara in the years to come. I’m also interested to see if any additional emerald pieces will be worn with it. The family has an emerald demi-parure, which seems to be a piece only selectively loaned out, but Queen Silvia also has a few sets of modern emerald jewels that would make a nice pairing (such as this one). As always, we also remain hopeful that more information about the tiara will come to light some day.

As a bridal tiara: yay or nay?

Photos: via Getty Images and SVT

Tiara Thursday: Queen Sophia's Diamond and Pearl Tiara

The lone tiara belonging to Princess Christina of Sweden, one of the sisters of King Carl XVI Gustaf, was made by Ribbhagen from small old cut diamonds and small pearls. It was a petite diadem, but one with a strong family ties. Along with other pieces such as the Nine Prong Tiara and Queen Sophia's Star and Pearl Tiara, it came from Queen Sophia of Sweden and Norway (1836-1913), the wife of Oscar II. Sophia left the tiara to her granddaughter, Elsa Cedergren (1893-1996). Elsa then returned the tiara to the working royal family by giving it to her goddaughter, Princess Christina, as an 18th birthday present.
Queen Sophia's Diamond and Pearl Tiara
As the only one of King Carl Gustaf's sisters that continues to attend regular royal events, Princess Christina has plenty of tiara opportunities and she regularly wore Queen Sophia's small tiara, alternating it with tiaras borrowed from the family jewel stash. The tiara and the rest of Princess Christina's personal jewels were kept in a safe in the home she shares with her husband near the Royal Palace. In late May 2012, Christina went to the safe and made a startling discovery: the tiara, together with several other jewels, was gone.
The Nobel Prize Ceremony, 1964. Christina is far left in Queen Sophia's tiara, Queen Louise is center in the Baden Fringe Tiara, Princess Sibylla is to the right in the Connaught Tiara.
A couple years prior to that discovery, Princess Christina's husband, Tord Magnuson, had made the acquaintance of a 19-year-old refugee. The boy arrived in Sweden without family, and Tord had become his mentor. The couple welcomed him into their home, even at times inviting him to stay with them. While alone in the apartment in April 2012, he stumbled upon the secret compartment that held the key to their safe.
The theft came in two waves. He first removed a bounty that included a gold bracelet given to Princess Christina by the Emperor of Ethiopia during a 1956 state visit, two rings (an aquamarine from Christina's great-grandmother, Helena of Waldeck and Pyrmont, valued at 25,000 SEK, and a large diamond royal heirloom valued at 450,000 SEK), and a pair of gold cufflinks that belonged to Gustaf VI Adolf (30,000 SEK). These items, he later said, were sold for a measly 9,000 SEK (just over $1,000) to a pair of drug dealers apparently intent on melting them down . On May 18th, he was at the home to help serve at a private party the couple were throwing, and used the opportunity to reenter the safe. This time, he took the tiara. He later stopped at a bridge and tossed the tiara - still in its black storage bag - into the water.
Nobel 2010
The theft was discovered a few days later. The thief tearfully confessed his crime to Princess Christina and her husband, but efforts to recover the jewels sold to the drug dealers were unsuccessful, as were all efforts by divers to recover the tiara. The tiara's value was placed at 350,000 SEK, bringing the minimum total value of the theft to 855,000 SEK (over $100,000).
Nobel 2011, the tiara's last big appearance
It was a small tiara that tended to disappear in her hair even with a tall base, but it must have been light and easy to wear and I would imagine Princess Christina misses having it at her disposal. Since it went missing, she has continued her frequent use of the Six Button Tiara (she also happens to be the best wearer of that tiara, so that works out well). She has also begun to borrow her sister Princess Margaretha's tiara, the Swedish Aquamarine Kokoshnik Tiara, and it's been nice to see her with an additional option after losing her own.

Where did this one rank on your list of favorite small tiaras?

Photos:  Kungahuset / via Getty Images

Tiara Thursday: The Dutch Ears of Wheat Tiara

Last week, Queen Máxima dipped into a part of the Dutch jewel collection she had previously left untouched, wearing a few of the family's diamond ears of wheat as hair ornaments. These may be small jewels, but they have a big history.
The Dutch Ears of Wheat Tiara
They are thought to have a Russian origin and are traced back to Queen Catherine of Württemberg (1788-1819, born Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia). Catherine's daughter Sophie (1818-1877) was the first wife of King William III of the Netherlands, and she brought the set of diamond ears of wheat to their Dutch home. They have remained in the royal family ever since, and are part of the family foundation.
Princess Margriet (left), Princess Irene (right)
Queen Máxima's use of three in barrette style was a reminder that they haven't always been set in tiara form. Using them in traditional tiara style became the norm during the reign of Queen Juliana (1909-2004; reign 1948-1980), and the tiara was worn particularly by Juliana's three youngest daughters (Princesses Irene, Margriet, and Christina). The current tiara frame allows for four, six, or eight ears of wheat to be set in two piles on either side of the head. The two lowest ears nearly join in the middle, but apart from that, there is no center design element.
Princess Laurentien
Princess Margriet used the tiara as a young princess and has continued to be the royal family member that uses the tiara most frequently for gala occasions. Princess Laurentien has also given it a try, but the Ears of Wheat have found their greatest recognition as a bridal tiara.
Princess Anita
All four of Princess Margriet's daughters-in-law (Princesses Marilène, Annette, Anita, and Aimée) wore the Ears of Wheat Tiara for their religious wedding ceremonies. Princess Irene's daughter, Princess Margarita, wear the tiara for her first wedding. And it's most recent bridal outing was on Irene's daughter-in-law, Princess Viktória, who wore it for her 2013 nuptials.
Princess Viktória
The brides have used the tiara with varying numbers of diamond elements, sometimes ending up hiding those elements with the pouf of a veil, which is one downside to using this as a bridal diadem. But the upside is that a veil can even out the somewhat sparse middle section of the tiara, helping avoid the unfortunate squaring off of the head that this tiara can cause when not backed by enough hair. Ears of wheat are a recurring motif in jewelry of the time and in tiaras, even though the long and skinny shapes aren't necessarily easy to adapt to a tiara design. It's always a surprise to be reminded that there are pieces in the royal collection that haven't been touched by Máxima's quest to leave no stone unturned (literally), but at the same time, I can't blame her for leaving this tiara alone.

Who do you think wears this one best?

Photos: via Getty Images and gahetNA//Fotocollectie Anefo/Nationaal Fotopersbureau

wedding

[australian native wedding][recentbylabel2]

Featured

[Featured][recentbylabel2]
Notification
Wondering what style of flower bouquets you'll choose for your big day?
Done