31 December 2017

Church at Sandringham

The Queen and members of The Royal Family attended church at Sandringham, Norfolk.
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I was all set to publish my year in review post with the 2017 tally of Her Maj's brooches this week, and then I realized that we were going to get one last appearance before the end of the year! So here it is, and...no brooch. Couldn't resist one last opportunity to troll us in 2017, could she?

Queen Mary's Button Earrings

Anyhoo, that review post will be up tomorrow!

25 December 2017

Christmas Service and Christmas Broadcast, 2017

Merry Christmas! We'll be chatting about the other fashions on Christmas display during the annual Windsor church walk at the other blog tomorrow. But first, The Queen:

The Queen, accompanied by members of the Royal Family, attended Christmas service at St. Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham.
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I confess, I had my fingers crossed that Christmas this year would bring us a first outing of the Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch received from Canada earlier this year. Her Maj had in mind another Commonwealth treat, however: the Australian Wattle Brooch, looking large and proud on this orange outfit. The Wattle is making its third appearance of 2017, which is the most we've seen it in one year since I started keeping track here.

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While we're at it, The Queen's companion in the car to church today was The Duchess of Cornwall, who sported another jewel we've covered here: The Queen Mother's Rock Crystal Brooch.
 

The Queen's annual message was broadcast on Christmas Day.
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The Queen's Christmas message this year speaks of home and pays tribute to London and Manchester as well as honoring The Duke of Edinburgh in the year he retired. Pictures from her wedding and this year's platinum anniversary join snaps of Prince George and Princess Charlotte at her side; off to the side (which you can't see in this shot) were also pictures of The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall, plus a picture from Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's engagement. She's wearing a dress made for her Diamond Jubilee, and accompanying that with one of her favorite brooches this year (and most years), the Jardine Star.

Jardine Star Brooch

Coming up before we hit the new year: our annual round up of the year in The Queen's jewels, with the big brooch tally! Stay tuned...

24 December 2017

Church at Sandringham

The Queen and members of The Royal Family attended church at Sandringham, Norfolk. 
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It's a little bonus pre-Christmas brooch appearance for you, courtesy of the fact that Christmas Eve happens to fall on a regular church-going Sunday this year! This is a good one, too: The Queen Mother's Curved Aquamarine Clip Brooches appeared on The Queen for the first time in 2016, and I love them as an occasional alternative to the favorite Aqua Clips.

21 December 2017

Train to Sandringham

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh traveled to Sandringham for the Christmas holiday.
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Off she goes! Right on schedule - and the day after hosting her annual pre-Christmas lunch for the extended family at Buckingham Palace - Her Maj took the train out to Sandringham to start her holiday break. She skipped the brooch this time, which is not unusual for this very button-y coat.

Three Strand Pearl Necklace

20 December 2017

The Jewels of The Crown, Season 2, Episodes 5-10

The Crown has always taken great care with the big historical moments they depict on the show, replicating everything as closely as possible. The second half of Season 2 offers up a handful of these big moments and, though they were a little light on the historical context (really, if you aren't well-versed in the politics of Britain in this era, you'd do well to google every player mentioned; they often lean towards inaccurate emotional motivations while underplaying the actual historical significance of events - it is a drama, after all), the show once again does an admirable job with recreations.


Episode 5: After depicting the struggle to modernize the monarchy, the show includes The Queen's 1957 Christmas message, the first ever to be televised. This was pretty faithfully recreated, down to the unusual sight of The Queen sitting with her legs crossed.
There was no brooch for this big event, just pearls and a metallic dress. (You can watch that first broadcast here.)

Episode 7: An engagement ring for Princess Margaret, after many drunken nights listening to music all alone (so says the show). Her real ring was described as "a ruby set like a rosebud with a diamond marguerite," a nod to Margaret Rose.

Episode 7: We've finally arrived at Princess Margaret's wedding to Antony Armstrong-Jones, and I genuinely don't envy the costume department for this one. They've done an admirable replica of Margaret's magnificent Hartnell dress, their task made even more difficult by the fact that Margaret was short and the actress that plays her is not. They've only really missed the volume of the skirt, and I expect that's down to those differences in height. They'd need an awfully full skirt to get the same effect.

The jewels are about as close as you can get, really: a good replica of the Poltimore Tiara, and a nod to the diamond collet necklace Margaret received from Queen Mary. Both of these (real) items were auctioned after her death.

The Queen's own Hartnell look for the day might be one of the best replicas the show has done. They've ticked all the right jewel boxes, too: two larger strands of pearls and the True Lover's Knot Brooch. This is the first time we've seen this brooch on the show.

Episode 8: It took this long to finally dig into The Queen's colored gemstones, but they were a must to authentically recreate her look for the dinner hosted at Buckingham Palace for the Kennedys. (The show also recreated the rumored tension between the two ladies and...well, leaned into it a bit too far.) Her blue gown was paired with the George VI Sapphires and Prince Albert's Sapphire Brooch, then and now. 

Episode 8: The Crown does The Queen's 1961 trip to Ghana a disservice by suggesting that she went on the trip because she had been upstaged by Jackie Kennedy, but at least they got the jewels correct.

She did wear the Grand Duchess Vladimir Tiara in its emerald setting, the first time the show has featured that, along with pieces from the Cambridge Emerald and Delhi Durbar Parure.

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The dress for her dance with Ghanaian president Kwame Nkrumah is another faithful recreation, as you can see from the real moment above.

Episode 10: The season ends with The Queen's family now complete, at Prince Edward's christening in 1964. Rather than attempt to imitate her actual look at Edward's christening, the show's nodding in the direction of the Cecil Beaton portraits of her with infant Edward and young Andrew, which are much more famous anyway. She's wearing the Teck Corsage Brooch, another first for the show - and not a bad replica at all.

They take a few liberties with the guest list, as well (understandable, in the name of ending on a family portrait); there's Princess Margaret cradling Lady Sarah Chatto, who in reality was born the day before Edward's christening.

And that's a wrap for season 2! What did you think? Season 3 will see new actors take over the roles of Elizabeth and Philip; I'm excited to see Olivia Colman step into The Queen's shoes.

Photos: Netflix and via Getty Images as indicated

17 December 2017

The Jewels of The Crown, Season 2, Episodes 1-4

The Crown on Netflix is back for Season 2, and our jewel-focused recaps are back as well!

The show picks up in the late 1950s and ends the season shortly after Prince Edward's birth in 1964, hitting along the way the trials and tribulations of Prince Philip, the trials and tribulations of Princess Margaret, and the struggle to modernize the monarchy.

To be honest, I didn't enjoy the second season as much as I did the first. The show vastly overestimated how much I care about Philip's angst (zero, I care zero) and their run through of Margaret's romantic problems wasn't backed by a very strong character development (her primary character trait seems to be a love of smoking). Claire Foy's portrayal of The Queen, however, remains impeccable. She deserves to add a few more trophies to her awards cabinet for her work here.

On to the jewels! As we did with Season 1, these recaps are mainly focused on the jewelry seen in the show. I'm focusing on those pieces that are intended to be replicas of the real deal; there are other items, brooches and so on, the show uses that seem to be pretty generic. 


Episode 1: Opening the season's premiere, in December, with the Diplomatic Reception, traditionally a December event, did make me smile. Just as they did in Season 1, the show continues to get its money out of this replica of the Cambridge Lover's Knot Tiara, perhaps more than it was really used at this time. Combining the replicas of  the Duchess of Gloucester's Pendant Earrings an Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee Necklace is spot on. There are couple brooches they might be replicating with that pearl brooch at the center of her sash, the scale and positioning being the two things that stick out as not true to life. Piling on a whole bunch of medals for The Duke of Edinburgh is just about right, although if they're replicating the Order of Merit around the neck, they're jumping the gun by a few years. (He didn't have that one until 1968.)

Episode 1: Having a solitary moment of contemplation while watching a ballerina she suspects Philip is cheating with, we've got the Grand Duchess Vladimir Tiara without any drops, an option we've seen in real life a few times. The cluster necklace doesn't seem to be replicating any particular piece in the collection.

Episode 3: There were several brooches shown in this episode that aren't really replicas of anything specific; this one, worn for a tense reunion in Portugal in 1957 after Philip was gone on a lengthy tour, included. It's hard to tell what brooch she actually wore for this event, but Philip really did wear a tie with hearts on it.

Episode 3: In the episode's most sparkling moment, the show depicts a baby coronation for Philip, when QEII granted him "the style and titular dignity of a Prince of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" in 1957. This is the show's first use of a replica for Queen Alexandra's Kokoshnik Tiara, and it's really not too bad. (Maybe too tall, though.)

The earrings could pass for the Pear Drop Diamond Earrings that have been around since at least the 1960s; the necklace could pass for the King Khalid Diamond Necklace, which wouldn't enter her collection until 1979.

Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother did indeed wear this jewel combination frequently: the Greville Tiara and Queen Alexandra's Wedding Necklace. Princess Margaret wears a tiara (seen last season) that could vaguely be one of a couple pieces from Queen Mary, but replicating anything she actually wore will have to wait until the next episode.

Episode 4: The show then moves from the angst of Philip to the angst of Margaret. The romantic angst, specifically. And it all seems to move rather quickly for a character that I just don't think they've nailed. For example, this dude up here half-heartedly proposes to her; then, just a few minutes later, we move directly into her great angst over the break up of the engagement, and I couldn't give it anything more than a shrug. Anyway...this necklace could pass for the diamond collet necklace Margaret received from Queen Mary, which was auctioned after her death, but they'll use a seemingly different piece to stand in for that later.

Episode 4: And here, finally, we have a tiara that Margaret actually wore: the Cartier Halo Tiara. They're portraying one of her Cecil Beaton birthday portraits, and while the tiara is out of place for that occasion, the multiple strands of pearls are exactly right.

Episode 4: The speedy engagement and un-engagement of Margaret leads to ~drama~ at a dinner for The Queen and Prince Philip's 10th wedding anniversary, where we see more of the jewel combos we've already seen in this season. Those diamond earrings on The Queen are sort of a larger version of her Diamond Pendant Earrings.

Episode 4: The episode wraps with a return to the Lover's Knot Tiara, this time paired with the Duchess of Teck Earrings. They were more of a day selection than a gala selection in real life at this time, but it works.

To be continued with episodes 5-10... 

Photos: Netflix, British Monarchy

14 December 2017

Audiences at Buckingham Palace

The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace. Among those received was The Sultan of Brunei Darussalam, HM Hassanal Bolkiah.
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Although there was actually a head-on shot published from this group of audiences, this brooch is a little easier to pick out from the side, I think. There's a dot of bright blue to indicate the first 2017 appearance of this turquoise and diamond brooch.

13 December 2017

Christmas Staff Luncheon

December 12: The Queen had a pre-Christmas lunch with her staff at the Goring Hotel.

This is a beautiful suit for Her Maj, and this rich color is the perfect background for the delicate Waterford Crystal petals on this Mappin & Webb brooch. Festively well played!

08 December 2017

Investiture at Windsor Castle

The Queen held an Investiture at Windsor Castle.
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Wow, we can actually sorta see a brooch here, at an investiture! But apparently that's not enough, as we still have disagreement.

07 December 2017

HMS Queen Elizabeth Commissioning, Scripture Union Anniversary, and Audiences

The Queen attended the Commissioning Ceremony of aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth in Portsmouth. Her Majesty was accompanied by The Princess Royal, Commodore-in-Chief of HMNB Portsmouth.
Royal Navy/MOD Crown Copyright 2017

Purple, Anne in uniform, and Her Maj’s usual delight around these sorts of events. That’s a top notch engagement for you. 

Royal Navy/MOD Crown Copyright 2017

Amethysts make it even better! They’re the cherry on top of this outfit. The grape on top of this outfit, perhaps we should say. 



December 6: The Queen attended Scripture Union's 150th Anniversary Service of Celebration at St Mary's Church, Islington. 
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Not so entirely certain about the red and gold of the Grima Ruby Brooch against this hot pink, on the other hand. 



December 6: The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace. 
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And here we have the Cambridge Pearl, doing an admirable job of sticking out despite the heavy floral on this dress. Plus, a triplet moment! She coincidentally coordinates very well with the Nigerian High Commissioner George Adesola Oguntade and Mrs. Oguntade.

05 December 2017

The 2017 Diplomatic Reception (and a New Loan for The Duchess of Cambridge)

The Queen hosted the annual Diplomatic Reception at Buckingham Palace. The Prince of Wales, The Duchess of Cornwall, The Duke of Cambridge, and The Duchess of Cambridge were among those present. 

It doesn't look like we're getting lucky again this year with a proper group shot inside of the palace like we did last year - you'll remember that pictures from inside this event are rare - but we do have a glimpse inside the cars carrying the other members of the Royal Family to the party. We've got some loans from The Queen, including a new loan, so we'll cover it here: 

The Duchess of Cornwall 
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Solid repeats for Camilla for the evening, as we've seen both this dress and this jewelry combination on more than one past occasion. 

Camilla will have worn the Royal Family Order of Queen Elizabeth II, though it is obscured by her cape in the car   
Riband of the Royal Victorian Order, certainly accompanied by the Star and Badge which can't be seen here


The Duchess of Cambridge 
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We have another new loaner for Kate, a diamond collet (rivière) necklace! This necklace must be a loan from The Queen, who has several of these collet necklaces in her collection. I am THRILLED to see her wearing one of these luscious necklaces! They're a) gorgeous and b) so versatile. The little black dress of (massive diamond) necklaces. She paired this with the tiara and earrings she's worn before.

 Cambridge (or Queen Mary's) Lover's Knot Tiara 
Collingwood Pearl and Diamond Earrings (from the private collection of the late Diana, Princess of Wales)
Diamond Collet Necklace

(A note on the necklace: While some will try to make a determination on which specific diamond necklace this is, I'm not likely to follow suit without official confirmation. Judging the size of a stone from one wearer to the next is a problem because the scale changes, and these necklaces can be changed in length by altering the number of stones to suit a new wearer. There are a lot of variables.)

01 December 2017

The Queen Mother’s Cartier Bracelet Quintet and Bandeau

The Queen Mother’s Cartier Bracelet Quintet and Bandeau

This set of five Cartier Art Deco bracelets were given individually as presents from King George VI, then Duke of York, to his wife, Queen Elizabeth, then Duchess of York and later Queen Mother, for birthdays and Christmases in 1923-25. The diamond bracelets have different colored baguette centers: one ruby, one emerald, one sapphire, and two diamonds. There are two diamond bracelets and five total, although only four are pictured above and this set is often referred to as a quartet rather than the quintet that it is.

The Queen Mother, as Duchess of York, wearing the bandeau (left) and the bracelets (right)

Mounts to turn three of the bracelets into a bandeau to be worn in the hair were added from Cartier in 1925. The Queen Mother wore the bandeau through the early 1930s, and the bracelets haven’t been seen as a bandeau since. She also regularly stacked the bracelets on one wrist. (A frequent question: what necklace is she wearing in the bandeau picture above? It’s impossible to tell what stone that is, thanks to the black and white, but she did have a sapphire and diamond chain necklace made in 1929 and this could be it. It is unknown whether that necklace is still in existence.)

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The Queen wears one ruby and one diamond bracelet, 1977

The bracelets are now in the collection of The Queen. She was spotted wearing the diamond and ruby bracelets as early as the 1970s, so it’s not known for certain when exactly she received them from her mother. She also loaned the ruby bracelet to The Princess of Wales for a tour of Australia in 1983*.

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The Princess of Wales wears one ruby bracelet, 1983

The Queen still wears these bracelets. She may get more use out of them for private events, since she has certain sets of jewelry she likes to wear together and most of her tiaras have other preferred bracelets, but that’s my hunch and nothing more.

Read more about these bracelets and bandeau at Order of Splendor.

*With thanks to Franck.

Appearances: 
11 December 2019: Diplomatic Reception
21 April 2018: The Queen's Birthday Party
18 May 2017: Dinner at The Ivy

30 November 2017

Visit to West Sussex

The Queen visited Canine Partners and Chichester Festival Theatre during her visit to West Sussex.
Royal Family

Any visit with puppies is a good visit, this we know.



(And the slight hiccup with the posy delivery just makes it better.)

Royal Family

I suppose we could also say that any day with the Jardine Star is a good day too, while we're at it.

28 November 2017

Lunch for the German President and Audiences at Buckingham Palace

The Queen, accompanied by The Duke of Cambridge, hosted a lunch for The President of the Federal Republic of Germany, Mr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, and Mrs. Elke Büdenbender, at Buckingham Palace. Also today, The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace.
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I'm not saying I don't miss seeing Prince Philip more often, but it is kind of fun to watch them spin the big wheel of family members to see which one gets to accompany Her Maj for the day. Prince William's obviously the perfect choice here, since he and his family visited Germany earlier this year.

ITN screencap

The big wheel of brooches landed on the Saskatchewan Tourmaline Flower today! I love this one for these heavily textured pink suits, it stands out so well.

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In fact, it's practically leaping off her shoulder in these audience photos, which made me laugh. IT'S ME, GUYS, THE PINK ONE! (Obviously I have also included this pic because I'm happy to recognize any and all caped visitors. This fabulous lady is Mrs. Al Nahar, wife of the Ambassador from the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Mr. Omar Barakat Mnawer Al Nahar.)

22 November 2017

Audiences at Buckingham Palace

The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace.
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Back to the brooch guessing game it is.

20 November 2017

The Duchess of Cambridge Wears the Four Row Japanese Pearl Choker

Another loan debuted...

The Duchess of Cambridge, with The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry, joined other members of the Royal Family and friends for a dinner celebrating the Platinum Wedding Anniversary of The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh at Windsor Castle.
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The Duchess of Cambridge has worn The Queen's Four Row Japanese Pearl Choker for the first time! This piece was commissioned by The Queen to use a collection of cultured pearls given to her by the Japanese government. It was also loaned to Diana, Princess of Wales during her marriage, and has been worn infrequently by The Queen, primarily during the 1980s and 1990s.

The Duchess also wore the Collingwood Pearl and Diamond Earrings this evening, which were a wedding present to the late Diana, Princess of Wales from Collingwood Jewellers and were in her private collection. Kate debuted those at the Spanish state banquet earlier this year.

This necklace is a good loan for Kate. While pearl necklaces aren't a signature jewel for her, she wears several pairs of pearl earrings and has use of two tiaras with pearls from The Queen's collection, plus other pearl jewels. So perhaps the Windsor fondness for pearls will continue to grow...

19 November 2017

70th Wedding Anniversary Portraits

A new photographic portrait of The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh has been released to mark their 70th wedding anniversary.
Royal Family Twitter

Big anniversaries call for new portraits, and this new one for their platinum wedding anniversary is full of symbolism. The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh are pictured in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle, between Thomas Gainsborough's 1781 portraits of King George III and Queen Charlotte, who were the British royal family's previously longest married couple with a marriage of 57 years. The photograph was taken by Matt Holyoak of Camera Press, the agency that handled the Baron photographs of their wedding in 1947 as its first assignment. The Queen wore this cream day dress by Angela Kelly to the service held for their diamond wedding anniversary.

Her brooch, by jeweler Andrew Grima, was a gift from Prince Philip in 1966. Press for the photo refers to it as the "Scarab" brooch (around here, we have simply called it the Grima Ruby Brooch).

Gold Watch

Royal Family Twitter

Update: The rest of the set was released on Sunday, this time with the platinum couple posing in front of a platinum background. And with smiles!

18 November 2017

The Fifth Wedding Anniversary Bracelet

The Fifth Wedding Anniversary Bracelet
Royal Collection Trust

The fifth wedding anniversary of The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh was in 1952, the year she took the throne. As an anniversary gift, The Duke commissioned from Boucheron a bracelet of his own design, made from gold, platinum, diamonds, rubies, and sapphires.


Philip's design includes his naval badge in the center with a diamond-set anchor, two roses set with diamonds and accented by rubies, two crosses of sapphires and a single diamond, one cross of rubies and a single diamond, and gold links designed as intertwined "E" and "P" letters.

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Diamond Wedding Anniversary Family Dinner, 2007

Occasions on which The Queen has worn this bracelet in public are rare, but she did appear to wear it during the celebrations marking their 60th wedding anniversary in 2007, at a family dinner hosted at Clarence House by The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall. The bracelet has also been displayed, and was included in an exhibition celebrating The Duke of Edinburgh's 90th birthday.

16 November 2017

Visit to Hull

The Queen visited Hull to mark its year as the United Kingdom's City of Culture. Her Majesty visited the Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy factory and formally opened the Allam Medical Building at the University of Hull.
Royal Family

New outfit alert! This is a "Stewart Parvin Air Force Blue cashmere coat over a silk print dress in Air Force blue, black and orange with a matching hat by Rachel Trevor Morgan," per the Press Association. Absolutely lovely, although a bit camouflaging during her visit to this medical facility...

Royal Family

There's no camouflaging Queen Victoria's Bow Brooch on that solid blue background, though, and that's a Good Thing. It looks great.

Royal Family

15 November 2017

Audiences at Buckingham Palace

The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace.
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Oh, bless, we can actually see her brooch! Ye Olde Pearl Trefoil it is.

12 November 2017

Remembrance Sunday

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh, accompanied by members of the Royal Family, attended the Remembrance Sunday ceremony at the Cenotaph, London. The service honors those that have died in armed conflicts.

An emotional day on an already emotional day today, as The Queen watched the Cenotaph ceremony from the balcony for the first time. With The Duke of Edinburgh by her side, they watched The Prince of Wales lead the ceremony on the ground and lay a wreath on Her Majesty's behalf.

The Prince of Wales lays the first wreath.
MOD Crown Copyright 2017
BBC screencap


MOD Crown Copyright 2017

The Duchess of Cornwall joined The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh on their balcony. The Duchess anchors her cluster of poppies with a different brooch each year, often badges or other pieces of significance to the occasion, and that's what she did this year: the badge of the 9/12th Lancers belonged to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and is of special importance to Camilla because her late father was a member of the 12th Lancers.

9/12th Lancers Badge

As mentioned yesterday, we'll take a look at some of the other family members present on the other blog, still to come.

11 November 2017

Festival of Remembrance

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh, accompanied by other members of the Royal Family, attended the Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall, London.
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The Kensington Bow Brooch has been a regular pick for anchoring poppies at remembrance events throughout the years, but this seems to be its first appearance since this blog's been up and running. I didn't think it had been that long!



Engagement and Wedding Rings

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A couple of old favorites for The Duchess of Cornwall tonight: her Everyday Pearl Pendant Earrings,
her Four Strand Pearl Choker with Small Diamond Clasp, and a selection of bracelets tricky to make out.

We will have another post for Remembrance Sunday and will probably check in with the rest of the fam at the other blog next week, so stay tuned...

09 November 2017

The Diamond Swan Brooch

The Diamond Swan Brooch

It's a favorite fact included on countless lists of trivia about The Queen: Her Majesty owns all the swans in the country! More accurately stated, the Crown has rights of ownership of all unmarked mute swans in open water, a right only exercised on certain parts of the Thames and its tributaries.

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Attending the Swan Upping ceremony in 2009

The Queen's Swan Marker leads the annual Swan Upping ceremony to conduct a census of the swans on sections of the Thames. When The Queen came along to watch the Swan Upping in person in 2009, she had just the brooch for the occasion: a small diamond swan of unknown provenance. Given the Crown's well-known and centuries-long association with swans, as well as the sheer size of The Queen's collection, I find it unsurprising that such a gem exists in the royal vault. Her Majesty has at least one other swan jewel, the Double Swan Brooch, debuted in 2014.

With Sir David Attenborough for The Queen’s Commonwealth Canopy documentary
ITN

Following its usage at the 2009 Swan Upping, the Diamond Swan Brooch was worn for an appearance with Sir David Attenborough recorded for an upcoming 2018 documentary on The Queen's Commonwealth Canopy forest conservation initiative, another fitting occasion for a nature brooch. A photo of the two was released today (above).

Appearances: 
2017: Appearance in The Queen's Commonwealth Canopy documentary, to be released in 2018

08 November 2017

British Museum Gallery Opening and Audiences at Buckingham Palace

The Queen officially opened the refurbished Sir Joseph Hotung Gallery of China and South Asia at the British Museum, London.
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This is the second time this year we've seen this brooch, which is a surprise. I'm not sure I love the red stones on this pink background, though...

Royal Family


Earlier, The Queen held audiences at Buckingham Palace.
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A purple dress, a double Cullinan brooch, and a photo that shows it? It is my birthday?!