28 September 2015

Royal Scots Dragoon Guards Visit

The Queen, Colonel-in-Chief, visited the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards at the regiment's new barracks at Leuchars, Fife.

Scottish engagements signal the impending end of the Balmoral break and the return of Her Maj to our current events radar! Huzzah. As we can see, she's got her contrasting outfits ready to go for all her large group photography needs.
Army in Scotland/Crown Copyright
She's wearing the appropriate regimental badge, which we last saw in a portrait taken when she was celebrating the 60th year of her colonelcy. This seems a nice way to ease back into the royal grind - she always looks particularly delighted to be with her regiments, and the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards had something else up their sleeve she particularly enjoys:

21 September 2015

The Duchess of Cornwall's Three Strand Pearl Choker with Aquamarine Clasp

The Duchess of Cornwall's Three Strand Pearl Choker with Aquamarine Clasp
One of most distinctive pearl chokers in The Duchess of Cornwall's collection features three strands of pearls and an aquamarine clasp. The pearls, which look to be natural pearls, are large and slightly irregular. The clasp has a large square aquamarine stone embedded in a nest of twisted gold strings studded with small diamonds.
Of all her pearl necklaces - and she has several - this one may have been in Camilla's personal collection the longest. She's been wearing it since at least the 1970s, and continues to do so today. It is a family heirloom that came from her mother, the Hon. Rosalind Shand (née Cubitt), according to an article in Hello! magazine. The Duchess of Cornwall has worn the choker for special events like Trooping the Colour as well as evening events, and the size of the clasp makes it an instantly memorable statement piece.

Photos: Carfax2 derivative work: Tktru Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

17 September 2015

The Duchess of Cornwall’s Cosmos Clip Brooches and Earrings

The Duchess of Cornwall's Cosmos Clip Brooches (Examples)
The Van Cleef & Arpels Cosmos collection is built around one of the famed jeweler’s classic designs, a combination of a four leaf clover and a flower that dates back to the 1950s. These four petal flowers are handmade in a variety of jewelry types and in different sizes and materials. The Duchess of Cornwall has two of the Cosmos clip brooches in her collection.
Both of her clips are the same design, with heart-shaped petals, a stem paved in round diamonds, and the largest round diamond sitting in the center of the petals, but one is set in yellow gold and one is set in white gold. The Cosmos clips come in three sizes (small, medium, large) and I believe Camilla’s clips are the large size, which would have 101 diamonds apiece. The clips shown as examples here are from the range that is currently for sale, and they can also be used as pendants on a chain, but The Duchess uses hers solely as brooches. 

These have been a part of her personal collection (presumably) since at least 2005, when they appeared at Ascot. She usually wears them together on one shoulder, occasionally splitting them up on her lapels or wearing just one at a time.

Top: Medium earclips, yellow gold setting. Bottom: Large earclips, white gold setting, approx. 6.8 carats total.
At a 2005 garden party (shown above), she also wore matching Cosmos earrings. Like the brooches, the earrings are available in a variety of materials and three different sizes; I believe she wore either the medium or large size, and again the diamond version.
The earrings are scarcely seen (in fact, I’m not sure they’ve been spotted in her ears since that 2005 outing), but I think she may have worn one of them as a brooch when attending the 2011 wedding of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (above). For that appearance, the lower brooch was smaller and without a stem, perhaps a smaller size brooch or maybe an earring repurposed. Most of the time, though, she wears the matched brooch set, and they make regular appearances.

You can see a video on the history of the Cosmos collection here.

Appearances:
17 June 2017: Trooping the Colour
9 March 2016: Clarence House Reception for Women of the World
20 October 2015: State Visit from China, Welcome Ceremony
2011: Wedding of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge 

Photos: Van Cleef & Arpels, Clarence House, and via Getty Images

15 September 2015

The Queen's Emerald or Diamond Pendant Earrings

The Queen's Emerald or Diamond Pendant Earrings
One of The Queen's more versatile pairs of earrings are these pendants, which can be switched from diamonds to emeralds. Each features a large hoop of single diamonds (creating a scalloped edge, which is how the earrings are described in Leslie Field's The Queen's Jewels) hanging from a detailed cluster of smaller diamonds, and surrounding a pendant which can include either a large diamond or a large emerald.
Queen Mary
I don't believe their provenance has been officially confirmed, but one eye-catching brooch of Queen Mary's may hold the key. The portrait above is sent to me often with inquiries about the jewels worn, either the necklace* or that intriguingly-shaped brooch in the center of her bodice. If you look closely at the brooch, the two sides seem to match the hoops used by The Queen as earrings.
Queen Mary was typically pictured with small earrings, so perhaps she had a brooch made from a larger pair she wouldn't wear. That is merely my speculation. As for The Queen, she's used these earrings in their diamond format on many occasions, including a state banquet at the White House in 2007 (pictured above).
In their emerald format, they've been used at the Order of the Thistle service and to accompany other emerald pieces like the Godman Necklace. They remain one of the larger pairs of earrings she still wears today.

*Since the question comes up often: The necklace is commonly known as Queen Alexandra's Collier Résille, made for her by Cartier and worn by her and Queen Mary. It hasn't been seen since Queen Mary's days.

Photos: via Getty Images/DR/Royal Collection

12 September 2015

The Queen's Pear Drop Diamond Earrings

The Queen's Pear Drop Diamond Earrings
These earrings from The Queen's collection feature two large pear drop diamonds suspended from two smaller diamonds and set in gold, a simple but classic design for the use of large stones like this. According to Leslie Field in The Queen's Jewels, they were created from family diamonds; they've been set in the current design since at least the 1960s.

Diana, Princess of Wales
These are best known for being worn by one very famous member of the family: The Queen loaned them to The Princess of Wales for her tour of Australia and New Zealand with The Prince of Wales in 1983. (You may recall that Diana was also loaned the King Faisal Diamond Necklace at this time.) I don't believe that they became a steady part of Diana's collection after that, so they were possibly just on short-term loan.

Video: The Queen wears the earrings in 1968
Since then, they have returned to their status as infrequently worn members of The Queen's earring collection, at least when it comes to public appearances. Even when they are worn, they are easy to mistake for similar designs, such as the Coronation Earrings or the Greville version. I can't help but think that makes them a good candidate for a loan to another family member, and hope we'll see them used as such again.

Appearances:
2010: State Visit from South Africa

Photos: Queen Elizabeth II/Royal Collection / and via Getty Images

10 September 2015

Queen Victoria's Hesse Diamond Jubilee Brooch

A brooch with a Queen Victoria connection in a week full of comparisons to Victoria, shall we?

The gifts poured in for Queen Victoria when she celebrated her Diamond Jubilee in 1897. Among the presents received were the Diamond Jubilee Brooch, now worn by The Queen, and another brooch of diamonds and cabochon sapphires. As detailed by Royal Magazin, which offers more on the history of the brooch and Jubilee, this was a family gift from four children of Victoria's daughter Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine, together with their spouses: Prince and Princess Louis of Battenberg (later the Marquess and Marchioness of Milford Haven), Grand Duke Sergei and Grand Duchess Elisabeth of Russia, the Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine, and the Emperor and Empress of Russia.
Queen Victoria's Hesse Diamond Jubilee Brooch
The main shape of the brooch is a line of diamonds forming a heart shape with a knot at the bottom, from which two large sapphire pendants hang. A third sapphire is located at the top of the brooch. The interior of the heart features a design of the number 60 in Slavonic characters.

Unlike the Diamond Jubilee Brooch, which became an instantly recognizable favorite of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, the Hesse Brooch went unseen (or so it seems) for about 110 years - all the way up until 2007, when The Duchess of Cornwall wore it during a visit to the United States. It seems likely that the sapphire brooch was in The Queen Mother's possession, given that Camilla wears a large portion of her jewels. If true, it certainly wouldn't have been the only piece of jewelry left unworn for decades in that collection.
The Duchess of Cornwall has worn the sapphire brooch several times, including during a visit to Norway in 2012. That appearance carried double significance because she and The Prince of Wales were visiting in honor of The Queen's own Diamond Jubilee, and because King Harald V is another descendant of Queen Victoria. The Hesse Diamond Jubilee Brooch may be one of the oldest pieces at Camilla's disposal, and is certainly one of those with the longest royal history, and I'm glad she's brought it out of hiding.

Photos: Stella/via Getty Images

09 September 2015

The Longest Reign, and the Borders Railway Opening

The day is here! At approximately 5:30 local time, The Queen will pass Queen Victoria as the longest reigning monarch in Britain and the other realms, a reign of 63 years, 7 months, 2 days, 16 hours, and 23 minutes. Her Majesty is staying at Balmoral Castle with her family, but emerged for one engagement today.

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh, accompanied by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, opened the Borders-to-Edinburgh railway in Scotland.
Could it have been anything other than one of Queen Victoria's Bow Brooches? This is one of the brooches best known for having come from her great-great grandmother, but it's also one that we see all the time - right in keeping with her desire not to make a fuss on this day.

BBC video screencap
She did make a short speech today (which you can see here, along with other tributes). Making brief note of her milestone, which she said was "not one to which I have ever aspired," she also conveyed her thanks: "Inevitably a long life can pass by many milestones - my own is no exception - but I thank you all and the many others at home and overseas for your touching messages of great kindness."



Buckingham Palace also released a new portrait by Mary McCartney (yes, daughter of Paul) for the occasion. With her favorite pearls in place, the Small Pink and Diamond Brooch pinned on, and her trusty handbag nearby, this is a reassuring image of The Queen that everybody knows so well. (A second shot can be seen here.)
© Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
Picturing the 89-year-old sovereign at work with one of the famous red boxes of state papers and in front of a photograph of her mother, who lived and worked past the century mark, it seems there is a clear message to be read here: Her Majesty's not done yet. And long may she reign!