Showing posts with label Royal Wedding 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Wedding 2011. Show all posts

Mirror mirror: The striking similarity between Kate's Royal Wedding dress and the gown worn by Berlusconi's princess goddaughter

By TAMARA ABRAHAM

Similarities: Italian-born Isabella Orsini (left) was stunned to notice the likeness between her own gown, from her wedding two years ago, and the Sarah Burton dress worn by the Duchess of Cambridge last month


There were gasps across the world when the new Duchess of Cambridge stepped out in her wedding gown at Westminster Abbey last month.

But another princess across Europe was more stunned than most as Prince William's bride walked down the aisle in her couture gown by Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen.

Isabella Orsini, who is the goddaughter of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, married Belgian Prince Edouard de Ligne two years ago in a startlingly similar dress.


Mirror mirror: Both women are slim, very pretty brunettes, who married into European royalty


Although hers was made for her by Belgian designer Gerald Watelet, it bore many similar hallmarks, from the lace applique bodice and sleeves to its full skirt and dramatic train.

The similarities are heightened by the fact that both women are slim, very pretty brunettes, and though the hairstyle differed, they both wore veils with diamond tiaras.

The likeness is so striking that newspapers and magazines across Germany, Belgium, France and Italy branded Catherine's dress a copy, with headlines reading 'Copy-Kate' and 'Copycat Kate'.


Making an entrance: Like Catherine, Ms Orsini had a long train on her gown by Belgian designer Gerald Watelet


Ms Orsini, 36, who is an actress, makes no such claim, though she does agree that comparisons between the two sets of wedding pictures are uncanny.

She told Italian magazine Novella 2000: 'As soon as the Duchess of Cambridge went out to go to church, I thought her dress was a copy of mine.

'It means Kate Middleton has good taste.'


Fashion statement: Catherine's dress had a full skirt and dramatic train to match the Westminster Abbey venue


The style, it appears, is a popular one for those marrying into European royalty.

Both the Duchess and Ms Orsini's dress mirror the wedding gown of Grace Kelly, who became Princess Grace of Monaco when she married Ranier III, Prince of Monaco, in 1956.



Style inspiration? Grace Kelly, who became Princess Grace of Monaco when she married Ranier III in 1956


Miranda Eason, editor of You & Your Wedding magazine, made the same observation.

She told the Daily Express: 'The reason they are similar is they both referenced Grace Kelly’s iconic wedding dress.'

But she added, there were plenty of differences between the Duchess and Ms Orsini's gowns.

'It’s a similar neckline and there are other similarities but the skirt, for example, is different,' she said.


Scoop: Kate ha copiato l'abito da sposa all'attrice italiana Isabella Orsini



source: dailymail

Why Wills struggled to fit the ring on Kate: she'd ordered it a size too small

By KATIE NICHOLL

Tight squeeze: Prince William struggled to put the ring on Kate's finger because the bride had ordered one a size too small, so it didn't slip off


When Prince William struggled to fit the ring on his bride’s finger at the Royal Wedding, most of the two billion people watching probably put it down to nerves.

But the real reason for those awkward few seconds was that Kate had asked for her ring to be made a size too small.


Amusement: Most of the two billion people watching Prince William's struggle to put the ring on Kate thought it was simply nerves


‘Kate asked Wartski, who made the ring, to make it a size smaller so it didn’t slip
off,’ says my man in the know.

‘She had her engagement ring resized because she’d lost weight and didn’t want the same problem with her wedding ring slipping off.

‘It has now become a subject of amusement to her and William.’

source: dailymail

Royal exclusive: The pictures you haven't seen from the Wedding of the Year

By AMY WILLIAMS

From The Dress to That Kiss, we were all riveted by the Big Day’s biggest moments. But what was happening behind the scenes? Our reporter at the wedding Amy Williams brings you the inside stories on the event of the decade


It is an interesting moment to request a bacon sandwich and a cup of breakfast tea. It’s 11.06am on 29 April, the sartorial secret of the decade is out of the bag (or the Rolls-Royce Phantom VI), the future Duchess of Cambridge is en route to her Duke, and Eamonn Holmes is peckish. He was up at 4am and is well into an eight-hour stint anchoring Sky News’s coverage of the Royal Wedding. With the commentary baton passed to royal expert Alastair Bruce for the ceremony, this is his moment to sit back and, like his audience, watch history from the sofa.


Crowds gathering outside Buckingham Palace


I’m on a 12-hour shift, hanging out behind the cameras with the Sky team at Canada Gate, where a village of tiny TV studios has been created at the foot of Green Park offering the best views of Buckingham Palace – no camping required. You can’t move for stars of the small screen: Phillip Schofield, Fearne Cotton et al limbering up their smiles and their superlatives – they may be fighting for ratings, but they are all great chums. Eamonn and his co-presenter Charlotte Hawkins bump into the BBC’s Huw Edwards before he goes on air at 9am: they point out that he’s forgotten to remove the napkin tucked into his collar to protect his tie from his croissant and there follows much

good-humoured puffing as to who will be clocking up the most airtime. ‘I won’t have been in a TV studio this long since the 1988 Telethon,’ says Eamonn; but Huw will be presenting highlights at 10pm and wins.

Jobs don’t get much bigger than this – the nation, buoyant at daybreak and besotted by the afternoon, has an insatiable appetite for televised news, opinion and pictures. This is the gig of the century, and not one YOU intends to miss.


Sky anchor Eamonn Holmes with his Sky News Sunrise partner Charlotte Hawkins: 'I have to be cooped up in a tiny studio all day with this one...It could be worse,' he says


Intrepid YOU correspondent Amy with the best view in the land of Buckingham Palace


From left: watching the wedding through a Sky lens with cameraman Chris Hollier; inside the gallery from where the TV coverage was directed



Bumping into the BBC's Huw Edwards (aka the competition)


From left: Eamonn steers coverage from the temporary studio; a TV autocue


YOU's Amy takes notes


Eamonn and Charlotte take a break while watching the wedding


With royal correspondent and presenter Sarah Hughes and Dickie Arbiter, resident royal expert for the day. 'What's impressed me most is the couple's guest list,' says Dickie, 'because you could name the number of celebrities on the fingers of one hand'


THE OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER

Photographer Hugo Burnand (centre) cycles to the Palace with his team including his mother Ursy (in purple) and wife Louisa (in blue)
Hugo Burnand took the portraits inside the Palace.

‘My team and I cycled in because it seemed the safest option. I’d spent a total of 32 hours inside the Palace in the run-up to the wedding, planning for the 26 minutes we had to shoot the portraits. There was no guarantee we were going to get my favourite shot — the “informal formal” of the couple surrounded by their bridesmaids and pages. In fact, we had only 30 seconds to pull that off, just before the balcony appearance. My team all looked at each other: “Shall we go for it? Yes!” It was one shot, so what we got is each individual giving their best in that split second — and what a split second.‘



THE ABBEY GUARDSMAN

Sergeant Major Lochrie from the Headquarters Household Division — the Queen’s personal troops — was positioned at the Great West Door of Westminster Abbey. He greeted all of the royal guests and opened Catherine’s car door when she arrived at the Abbey.



Kate as caught by one of the hundreds of TV cameras lining the route


Kate's arrival at 11am at the Abbey, as viewed on monitors in the Sky gallery


From left: News studio director Tom Allen who was calling the shots from an outside broadcast truck; Royal producer Rose Gretton who fed vital information on proceedings to the studio sofa



THE HAIRDRESSER

Richard Ward was responsible, with James Pryce, for Kate’s hair, for the bridesmaids and the rest of the bridal party.


‘We started working on Kate’s hair at 7.30am at the Goring Hotel, though we’d reported to Clarence House at 5.45am — I’d set my alarm for 4.45, but I was wide awake at 4.15 willing it to go off! After waving Kate off from the side of the hotel with what felt like the entire hotel staff, I rushed to Buckingham Palace to await her return. We were offered champagne and sandwiches and allocated a suite for the morning — it’s a tough life! I’d lost my father the weekend before the wedding so it was an emotional day for me. Of course, it’ll all return to normal soon, and I’ll have to get back to actually cutting some hair.’


Eamonn encounters another friend from the BBC, a nervous Fearne Cotton, who, at 7am, was preparing to mingle with the crowds wearing a polka-dot dress and red kitten heels


Amy catches up with David Emanuel, co-designer of Princess Diana's wedding dress, who'd spent the morning commentating for UK, Canadian, French and Hungarian TV. 'I had become the master of speculation,' he said, 'but it all stopped when I finally saw the dress. It was a triumph. I looked at Kate and thought, "This is a woman in charge"'


THE ROYAL HARPIST

Claire Jones, an official musician to the Prince of Wales, played throughout the lunchtime reception at Buckingham Palace.


‘When you’re playing at a big event you can’t help but look around the room for the faces you might recognise, celebrities and so forth, but I remember at one point looking up from my spot in this huge reception room and realising everyone around me was royal. William came to thank me at 3pm when I finished, then Catherine joined him and I also spoke to Charles, the Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Edward and Sophie, and Prince Harry. It seemed to mainly be a drinks do, I didn’t even see any canapés to be honest, but I like that — when you put a harp into a situation where there is food and cutlery people are likely to take far less interest in you or the music.’


Sky News presenter Dermot Murnaghan takes in the crowds and a much-needed coffee after holding the fort at the studio from 4am to 9am. 'It's a long stint, but on a day like today a lot of news is drip-fed to us. At 8am we heard that Kate and William would be known as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and that kept us going for the final hour. My little daughters are not impressed, though - I've already had them on the phone wanting to know why she won't be Princess...I don't think Duchess cuts the mustard with the under-tens!'



THE FANFARE TRUMPETER


Senior aircraftman Jonathan Pippen (above, second from left) performed with the Central Band of the Royal Air Force inside Westminster Abbey.


‘Before the service I walked around the Abbey more or less straight into David Beckham. I said, “All right, mate?” and he said, “All right.” There we were, hanging out at the same wedding! Me and the boys had a pretty good view from high above the congregation. We couldn’t hear much, but when the crowds outside cheered we knew they’d said “I do”. When it was over our wing commander shared a bottle of port with us to celebrate — on a normal parade day you’d never find yourself drinking with a commander ranks above you. It was brilliant.’


From left: One of the many spectators, revealing a humourous message; our photographer Clive Booth, overcome by the romance of it all, snaps these lovers outside Buckingham Palace at 5pm as the crowds disperse


THE CONDUCTOR

Christopher Warren-Green, music director and principal conductor of the London Chamber Orchestra who played during the wedding service.


Amy catching up with Lucy Yeomans, editor of Harper's Bazaar, who'd been sharing her fashion know-how with Sky viewers: 'When Kate stepped out and we knew that it was McQueen, all our Christmases came at once'


With royal correspondent Paul Harrison, who attended the service for Sky. 'The guests were stretching their necks beyond normality to get a glance of that dress. Then the handkerchiefs came out - but not in the journalists' section!'



William and Catherine on their way to Buckingham Palace after the wedding service


source :dailymail

'It was so difficult': Fergie reveals her hurt over Royal Wedding snub

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Hurt: Sarah Ferguson told Oprah Winfrey she watched the Royal Wedding on television from Thailand


Sarah Ferguson has spoken for the first time about the House of Windor's decision to not invite her to last month's royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

The Duchess of York, 51, instead went to Thailand where she watched the coverage on television.


'So difficult': Fergie was disappointed she couldn't join her daughters Eugenie and Beatirce at the ceremony


She was disappointed she wasn't able to accompany her daughters, Princess Beatrice, 22, and Eugenie, 21, who attended the wedding with their father Prince Andrew.

'I was not invited,' Ferguson, 51, who was caught up in a scandal last year after she was taped offering access to Prince Andrew for $724,000, said on The Oprah Winfrey Show.


In contact: The 51-year-old said she spoke to her ex-husband Prince Andrew throughout the day

'I went through the phase of feeling so totally worthless and that [it] was quite right they didn't invite me. Why would they - why would they invite me?'

'I chose to go and be in Thailand in a place called Camelia... the jungle embraced me,' she explained.

Ferguson revealed she was in contact with her former husband, whom she married at Westminster Abbey in 1986, throughout the day.

'When Andrew went with the girls, we were talking all morning and he was saying, "It's okay. Just remember we had such a good day. Our wedding was so perfect." Because we're such a unit together. He made me feel very part of the day on April the 29th.'


Royal affair: Fergie said Diana would be 'so proud of her son'

Ferguson is to have a show on Winfrey's new cable station, OWN.
Her interview on The Oprah Winfrey Show will air in the U.S. tomorrow.


Sarah Ferguson Spills on Royal Snub


Duchess Of York Sarah Ferguson: From Royalty To The Real World



source: dailymail

Prince William whisks Kate away on a £4,000-a-night tropical honeymoon 'in the Seychelles'

By REBECCA ENGLISH

And they're orf: Kate and William at Buckingham Palace before flying by helicopter for their 'mini-moon'


The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have left for a two-week honeymoon in a secret hideaway in the Indian Ocean.

The newlyweds will stay in an exclusive villa that costs £4,000-a-night and is said to be located on one of the most beautiful and romantic islands in the world.

The Duke and Duchess are believed to have flown out by private jet yesterday before being taken by helicopter from the mainland to the tropical retreat.



Back to work - but not for long. William was spotted returning to the Air and Sea Rescue headquarters at RAF Vally in Anglesey after the wedding


William's car was apparently seen leaving Anglesey, north Wales, yesterday accompanied by a police Range Rover piled high with luggage.

A spokesman for St James's Palace said he would not confirm their honeymoon destination, although according to reports, the couple may have headed for the Seychelles.

The spokesman added William has taken two weeks leave from operational duties.

'The couple have asked that their privacy be respected during their honeymoon.'


Stocking up: Kate was seen shopping for provisions at Waitrose shortly after the celebrations


If the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have chosen the Seychelles for their honeymoon they could well be heading for an idyllic location they visited four years ago - the island of Desroches


A source said: ‘It’s one of the most incredible places you will ever visit and Kate will have the time of her life. It’s everything you could want from a honeymoon destination and more – beautiful beaches, tropical seas and complete privacy.

‘The Prince’s protection officers flew out to check it out and their villa has been booked and confirmed.


The couple were seen taking off from Buckingham Palace the day after their wedding


Like everyone else he works with, Prince William had to apply to take time off before the wedding


The island of Desroches is a paradise just four miles long, about 150 miles south west of the Seychelles' main island, Mahe

source: dailymail

The big day was a week ago, but for the brands Kate wore, celebrations are only just beginning

By LIZ JONES

Sell out: Demand has surged for bridal dresses like the Alexander McQueen gowns Kate wore


All eyes have swivelled to the new Duchess of Cambridge to take up the baton and help our fashion industry limp out of the recession.

Becoming the unofficial style ambassador is the best job Kate can be doing for our morale and the economy.

But every brand (and they were all British) involved in the wedding, in however small a way, has seen sales go through the roof.

By far the biggest surge in orders has come from the U.S. We can expect these to increase when Kate goes there on her first official tour in the summer.


In demand: The perfumee Kate wore was Illuminum's White Gardenia Petals


THE FRAGRANCE
On her wedding day, Kate wore White Gardenia Petals from Illuminum, created by British ‘nose’ Michael Boadi.

The clean, fresh scent has a note of coconut bursting into ylang ylang, lily of the valley and jasmine, with amber wood as the base note.

Demand is so high there is a waiting list of customers longing to smell like the royal bride.

White Gardenia Petals costs £70 and is available exclusively from roullierwhite.com

THE EARRINGS
While Kate’s tiara was made by Cartier and borrowed from the Queen, her stunning earrings were a gift from her parents.

The diamond-set oak leaves with a pear diamond drop and pave-set diamond acorn were inspired by the new Middleton coat of arms.


Unavailable: Robinson Pelham won't be making anymore earrings like the Duchess', despite requests


BRIDESMAID DRESSES
Having designed children’s wear for 30 years, Marlborough-based Nicki Macfarlane is renowned for her exquisite outfits for bridesmaids and pageboys. She made the four young bridesmaids’ dresses: ballerina length, box-pleated ivory silk satin gazar, layered over organza, wild silk and petticoats.

They were handmade in Wiltshire and Kent, given an English lace trim and embroidered with the child’s name.



Pretty: The young bridesmaids, pictured with Maid of Honour Pippa Middleton in an Alexander McQueen design, wore handmade dresses by Nicki Macfarlane while their shoes were by the Rainbow Club


BRIDESMAID SHOES
Rainbow Club, based in Exeter, has been designing, making and hand-dyeing wedding shoes since the mid-Eighties.

Kate’s bridesmaids wore classic Mary Janes in satin, embellished with a Swarovski crystal buckle. Sales manager Richard Coles says: ‘We’ve been run off our feet, with people calling from all over Europe and the U.S.’

Why did Kate choose this little firm of 30 employees?

‘For the quality. We guarantee we will dye a shoe to match the exact colour of the dress. The Royal Wedding shoes were a special shade of ivory.’

Children’s bridesmaid shoes start at £30, rainbowclub.co.uk


THE HATS

Vivien Sheriff is a milliner who has her atelier in a decidedly unglamorous farm building in Wiltshire.

She made the famous fascinator worn by Kate on her first royal engagement in February, and was commissioned by 53 guests to make bespoke pieces.

Every piece is handmade by a team of six. An elaborate headpiece can cost up to £1,000. Since the wedding, online sales have doubled.


Best foot forward: Kate stepped into married life wearing LKBennett wedges


'The Kate': The shoes have been re-issued in her name

COURT SHOE WEDGES

The day after the wedding, Kate teamed a wintry blue Zara dress with a cropped black blazer and LK Bennett Greta wedges, £150. This prompted the chain to reissue the style, renaming it the Kate. It will be available in June, but already has a waiting list.

The Kate effect has meant sales of all wedges have soared at Topshop, Hobbs and even Christian Louboutin.

source: dailymail