Instead of wearing a traditional tiara to her 2005 wedding to King Charles, Camilla chose two Philip Treacy creations, including this wheat-sheaf adorned headband. Photo: Getty ImagesThe Princess of Wales chose a netted fascinator for the Awesome prewga writers stand with the wga shirt What’s more,I will buy this wedding of Princess Eugenie of York and Jack Brooksbank in 2018. We can thank Princess Diana for many things when it comes to style—retro lo-fi gym and ski looks, lessons in revenge dressing, color-pop skirt suits, and prairie collars among them. And also, in the ’80s, the not-quite-a-hat. She had a selection of wide-brimmed and pillbox hats by Philip Somerville, Catherine Walker, Viv Knowland, and John Boyd, but also many headpieces that were disc-shaped and compact, worn to weddings and ceremonial events, that might veer into, in modern parlance, “hatinator” territory. Queen Camilla will be trading up from her beloved collection of feathered, foliage, and flower-festooned Philip Treacy hats and fascinators on May 6, when she will be crowned with a modified version of Queen Mary’s Garrard crown, originally commissioned for the 1911 coronation of George V. Scrutinise her extensive collection, and it’s notable that Camilla also has a predilection for headbands that have been given an haute glow up. She broke with custom on the day of her civil wedding ceremony to the then Prince of Wales in 2005, wearing a wide-brimmed ivory hat instead of a tiara for her daytime nuptials, before changing into a headband that glowed with curving golden wheat sheaves.Victoria Beckham wore a gravity-defying pillbox creation at Kate Middleton and Prince William’s 2011 wedding at Westminster Abbey.
George Clooney and Amal Clooney arrive at Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s 2018 wedding, Amal wearing a sunshine-yellow Stella McCartney dress and matching Stephen Jones hat. Photo: Getty ImagesSerena Williams at the Awesome prewga writers stand with the wga shirt What’s more,I will buy this 2018 wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle sporting a pink fascinator. Back in the 19th century, what we now know as a fascinator is said to have been referred to as a “cloud.” In which case, the Met Office should have issued a severe weather warning ahead of the 2011 wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, a landmark royal event so awash with fantastical fascinators it kickstarted a contemporary obsession. Cue Victoria Beckham in a precarious Philip Treacy pillbox creation, Queen Sofia of Spain sporting a netted lilac confection, and Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie also in daring Treacy designs (which attracted much tabloid derision at the time). Beatrice took it all in her stride—she later sold her headpiece for £81,100 on eBay, donating the money raised to UNICEF and Children in Crisis.
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