WEDDING FLOWERS: Royal Wedding Dresses
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Showing posts with label Royal Wedding Dresses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Wedding Dresses. Show all posts

Royal Wedding Dresses: Mette-Marit of Norway


Norway's unexpected royal bride gave us an unexpected royal wedding dress and the gown, just like the princess who wore it, turned out to be a big success that stood the test of time. Mette-Marit Tjessem Hoiby said 'I do' to Crown Prince Haakon Magnus of Norway on August 25th 2001 in a dream of a dress that became an instant classic and remains one of the best loved royal wedding gowns of her generation. Here's a look back at the royal wedding dress of Norway's Crown Princess.





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There was a lot of speculation about Mette-Marit's wedding gown in the run up to her marriage in Oslo Cathedral. OK, she was a royal bride which means gown chatter is compulsory but Mette-Marit's regal love story turned this one into a frock frenzy.  The bride already had a son from a previous relationship and before her marriage she'd given a tearful interview apologising for some of her past associations - she had enjoyed some serious partying before her romance with Haakon Magnus. What does a really modern royal bride wear for her big day?



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There was also the added pressure of this being the first major royal wedding of the 21st century with the groom a future king to boot. Mette-Marit's own sense of style also sat at odds with what was expected from a regal bride but no one need have worried. The woman who walked up the aisle on the arm of her handsome prince had the whole royal wedding dress thing sorted.


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Mette-Marit chose a beautifully fitted deep cream dress of crepe and tulle designed by Ove Harder Finseth. It was an effortlessly simple creation made in an elegantly complicated way. The square cut top with fitted sleeves gave way to a bodice that flowed into a slightly flared skirt. Everything about it moved as one. It was understated and knock 'em out all in one go.




There was a train - there is always a train at royal weddings, it's compulsory - but this one flowed elegantly from the skirt into a pool of fabric that followed the bride rather than having her drag it up the aisle. Perhaps the most ethereal and beautiful part of the whole look was the way that the tulle veil  - all 20 or so feet of it - just kept on going once the train had finished.



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Mette-Marit really did keep things simple. Her wedding tiara was a bandeau made of diamond daisies, given to her by her new parents in law while the rest of her jewellery was low key. It didn't matter. There was so much elegance about this simple look which suited the bride to perfection that it was almost a statement of intent. Mette-Marit, now Crown Princess of Norway, would adapt to her new role but in her own way. She looked like a picture perfect princess but one who had grown up in the 20th century.


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Sixteen years on, it's still a classic and the princess who wore it has been a huge success in her role. Mette-Marit hasn't shied away from taking on big challenges in her royal role - championing causes including literacy and working with charities promoting HIV/ AIDS awareness. She's become popular and well respected and is now part of a royal family so valued that it's approval ratings hit 90% during jubilee celebrations in 2016.  That's about the popular vote for this dress whenever it's held up to scrutiny. Norway's unexpected princess really did give us an unexpected classic of a royal wedding dress.

Royal Wedding Dresses: Lady Diana Spencer



It's about as famous as royal wedding dresses come. The Emanuel design worn by Lady Diana Spencer as she married the Prince of Wales on July 29th 1981 remains an icon of modern royal fashion. We know the bows, the frills and the creases like the backs of our own hands but that doesn't mean we can't enjoy them one more time. Thirty six years on from the wedding of the century, here's a look back at Diana's wedding dress.







The commission for the dress everyone wanted to make was given to designers David and Elizabeth Emanuel who had been favourites of Diana before her engagement was announced. They became overnight superstars and the dress was world famous before it was even made.



The final design has been called romantic more times than any of us have had hot dinners. It really was the stuff of which fairytales were made with huge sleeves, huge skirt and a huge bow surrounded by endless sparkles and lace trims. Diana was already the subject of endless projections before she had even said 'I do' and this dress is one of them. She was the perfect princess in the making and was dressed as everyone expected a princess to look.



Ask anyone about Diana's wedding dress and perhaps the first thing they will say is that it was creased. As the bride got out of the Glass Coach at St Paul's Cathedral that huge skirt made a protest at having been crammed into a vintage carriage and came out crumpled. It came into its own as Diana walked down the aisle but that creased first look is the stuff of royal legend.


 
Let's get down to basics. The dress was made of silk, taffeta and antique lace and featured over 10,000 pearls and sequins. Every royal wedding dress needs a train and the frock at the marriage of the century didn't disappoint. Just the twenty five feet of fabric followed Diana up the aisle attached at the waist of the dress. The train features a scalloped edge and was completely covered by her light veil.


Diana's wedding dress was an instant icon and was copied the world over. For years after her marriage, puff sleeves and huge skirts were popular choices for brides. The gown itself has been displayed several times but now belongs to Prince William and Prince Harry - they inherited it when they both reached the age of 30. Whether the dress will be seen in public again isn't known. But this royal wedding gown has a place in history all of its own as the stuff of which royal fairytales were (briefly) made.

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