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Kate's Wedding Dress -Grace Kelly-inspired, Sarah Burton-Designed ‎

SEVERAL MONTHS of speculation and feverish anticipation reached its climax on Friday when the world finally caught a glimpse of Kate Middleton’s wedding dress that, observers said, was reminiscent of Grace Kelly’s gown.

Sarah Burton, creative director at Alexander McQueen, designed the bridal frock, with long Medieval-style sleeves and a high-necked lace bodice. The skirt was of ivory and white satin gazar. Burton, who took over the avant-garde fashion house following its namesake designer’s death last year, was a front-runner among those rumored to make the wedding dress.

Hamish Bowles, European editor at large for Vogue magazine and a guest commentator on CNN, described the dress as “sublime, worthy of the [Westminster] Abbey and worthy of the occasion.” Bowles added the dress was a “good tribute” to McQueen, the late British designer whose lifework, incidentally, will be honored at the Metropolitan Costume Institute Gala in New York this month.

“Everything was exquisitely done,” Bowles said.

Popular bridal designer Vera Wang also told CNN, “It’s very much what I expected, not so fashion-forward and won’t age in photographs.”

Modest train

The lace bodice called to mind another princess bride, Grace Kelly, who wed Monaco’s Prince Rainier in 1956. In contrast to Kelly’s demure, close-necked dress, however, Middleton’s showed her decollétage with a V neckline.

Unlike Prince William’s mother Diana’s own fairytale wedding dress, his bride’s train was also modest by comparison, at only nine feet long. The dress featured a cinched waist and padded hips, which, said the statement, drew on the “Victorian tradition of corsetry and is a hallmark of Alexander McQueen’s designs,” and emphasized the bride’s svelte physique.

The new Duchess of Cambridge wore a halo tiara made by Cartier, on loan from Queen Elizabeth. According to accounts, the tiara was once a gift of George VI to his wife and was handed down to their daughter, the current monarch.

The bride, who wore her hair down, also sported a pair of drop diamond earrings, a gift from her parents. Her wedding ring was made by the Mayfair jeweler Wartski from, following royal family tradition, a piece of Welsh gold given to the couple by the Queen after their engagement. On her right ring finger, she wore her sapphire and diamond engagement, which once belonged to her groom’s late mother.

The groom wore a crimson military uniform.

Wang was particularly taken by the bridal veil, which she said beautifully framed the bride’s face. She praised its “classicism,” and described the overall look as “elegant and dignified.”

Speaking to CNN before the ceremony, Wang said she also hoped the dress will come from McQueen, whom she described as a “brilliant house” for its drama and technique.

Burton, 35, was McQueen’s right hand, and has churned out critically acclaimed collections since she took over the label, successfully mixing feminine flair with her mentor’s signature theatrical edge. McQueen committed suicide in February last year.

The Central Saint Martins-educated Burton’s work for the royal wedding cements her reputation and stature in the fashion industry, though the economic implications of it, quipped Wang, could be “a tad aggravating for me.” The American is the go-to designer of many a celebrity bride.

While the royal wedding itself is hoped to re-energize the monarchy, the impact of the bridal dress is also expected to boost the British fashion industry. The dress is also expected to influence bridal trends in the coming years.

PH designers react

Some local fashion watchers, however, were left wanting after watching the royal wedding. It seems some expected the youthful and high-street-loving Middleton to push the envelop, especially considering her choice designer.

“It fits her well. It reflects her personality,” designer Joey Samson said. “It was, however, a very safe choice. I read that [Middleton] worked closely with Sarah Burton, and I don’t know how [the designer] suppressed her edginess and aesthetics. I had expected it to be simple but with an interesting material, and yet I don’t see that. Sarah Burton is a young designer and very current. I just feel that the dress lacked that flavor.”

Another designer, Jojie Lloren, agreed. “I was expecting a younger design. I was kind of surprised; it’s very classic and very safe. She’s young and I think she played it too safe.”

Lloren added he had expected the dress to make a statement, perhaps just as much as the 1981 frou-frou of Diana’s wedding dress.

Nonetheless, the royal wedding was a triumph for British designers, with many of the guests opting for local couture.

Pippa Middleton, the bride’s sister, wore a simple, close-fitting cap-sleeved ivory dress with a cowl neckline, also by Burton. The bride’s mother, Carole, opted for a sleek, tailored sky-blue dress with a matching coat by the house of Catherine Walker. The designer, who died last year, was also a Diana favorite.

Camilla Parker-Bowles, the groom’s stepmother, went for Anna Valentine. The designer, who made the Duchess of Cornwall’s 2005 wedding dress, created this time an ice-green and champagne silk dress and coat with a matching bag. The Duchess also wore Jimmy Choos and a Philip Treacy hat.

Millinery

The Irish milliner was the choice of many royal guests, including pregnant pop star Victoria Beckham, who wore a midnight-blue cap by Treacy to go with her maternity smock of the same shade. The dress is from Beckham’s own label. She arrived with her football superstar husband David, who wore Ralph Lauren tails and held a top hat, though he wasn’t photographed wearing it on his head.

Samantha Cameron, the British prime minister’s wife, went for a teal Burberry dress, but eschewed tradition and arrived sans hat.

One of the young royals, Princess Eugenie, wore Vivienne Westwood and a Philip Treacy hat. Her sister, Beatrice, went for Valentino.

On the eve of the wedding, the Italian designers Giorgio Armani and Alberta Ferretti broke their silence and released separate statements of the guests they were dressing for the wedding.

Chelsy Davy, Prince Harry’s on-off girlfriend, wore a satin aquamarine boat-neck dress by Ferretti, slightly different from the sketch the designer released. Perhaps in keeping with etiquette, the young woman’s dress sported long sleeves, versus the cap sleeves in the sketch.

Davy will also wear a Ferretti design for the dinner-dance at Buckingham Palace. It will be a blue satin-crepe one-shoulder gown, reported Women’s Wear Daily.

Armani designed the dresses of Lady Frederick Windsor, Princess Tatiana of Greece and Denmark and Princess Mathilde of Belgium.

 Source Link:- http://lifestyle.inquirer.net

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ROYAL WEDDING: KATE'S DRESS BOOST TO FASHION INDUSTRY

ROYAL WEDDING: KATE'S DRESS BOOST TO FASHION INDUSTRY

KATE’S dazzling wedding dress is expected to give our fashion industry a pick-me-up, particularly the high-end designer labels that compete with the biggest names in haute couture.

The Sarah Burton creation is receiving plaudits from all quarters for its breathtaking beauty and British craftsmanship.

Many will have been inspired to try the finest clothes this country can produce for themselves.

Sarah Burton, 36, creative director at Alexander McQueen, is well used to show-stopping fashion moments at the label’s catwalk shows, which are not for the faint-hearted.

However, she succeeded in merging intricate traditional craftsmanship with modern-edged design to create the ultimate fashion moment on Friday.
It was a confident choice by Kate to use a designer associated with breaking tradition. She took advice from British Vogue editor Alexandra Shulman, and the collaboration has been welcomed by the fashion industry.

Daphne Guinness, fashion icon and muse of the late Alexander McQueen, described it as “an inspired choice”.

Fashion editor Stephen Mahoney said: “The Kate Middleton dress has catapulted Sarah Burton to a completely different level.

“She was previously in Alexander McQueen’s shadow but has become overnight a designer that will be recognised and respected globally.

“I think McQueen will be forced to have a separate bridal collection from now on to satisfy demand.”

A friend said: “Sarah always harboured the ambition of designing at a high level. She loved the drama of Versace’s clothes and she was conscious that he was a favourite of Princess Diana, Elton John and Elizabeth Hurley.

“To design the dress for the Royal Wedding is sure to have made her dreams come true.”

Kate’s gown captured the modern take on Victoriana that has become the Alexander McQueen hallmark.

Source Link:- http://www.express.co.uk

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Facebook Fans Exceed 72,000 Embracing Pippa Middleton

One of the biggest highlights of this year will no doubt be the Royal Wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton, which took place on Friday 29th April. With millions of people around the globe tuning into the royal event, and highlights of the day including the appearance of Kate’s wedding dress and the two kisses on the balcony between the loving couple, another person was snatching the spotlight.

That of Kate’s younger sister Pippa Middleton. Chief bridesmaid to Kate, she has become so popular that she has racked up some 72,621 likes on the popular site. According to metro, a facebook page was set up just for Pippa known as the “Pippa Middleton Ass Appreciation Society,” and many have been turning to the site leaving messages to say how attractive she looked including her bottom!


As thesun.co.uk reported, in comparison to this, some 33,000 people took to the site and “liked” Kate’s wedding dress. Along with Facebook it seems that rival Twitter have also seen a rise in Pippa fans with her becoming the trending topic yesterday.

Did you tune into the Royal Wedding on Friday? Are you in agreement that Pippa looked absolutely stunning and did her sister proud? Let us know.

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Indian Viewers Watched Weddind Of Will-Kat About 42.1 Million


The royal wedding might have been the United Kingdom's but, if television viewership figures are to be believed, more Indians were interested in watching it than Brits themselves.

A UK report stated that the viewership of Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding peaked to 24 million. But an aMap report said about 42.1 million Indians watched the royal wedding on Friday afternoon.

The royal wedding, however, could not beat the national obsession in India, cricket. The viewership of the World Cup final was nearly 67 million, more than one-and-a-half times the peak Indian viewership of the British royal wedding.

Not that the 24-million figure was small for the United Kingdom. The wedding made an impact on the viewership of English channels, boosting their viewership by 15 per cent. And viewership among housewives jumped by 25 per cent. aMap vice-president Jiniti Shah explained: "Viewership among housewives increased as they were glued to every detail of the wedding ceremony, the designer clothing and the grand affair."

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Royal Wedding UK TV Watching Figures Over 24 Million

Combined TV viewing figures sees Royal Wedding coverage become one of the top ten most-watched events on record.
British TV coverage of Prince William and Kate Middleton's wedding has topped 24 million, according to the BBC.

The BBC's coverage peaked at almost 20 million viewers with many more watching online and via BBC iPlayer. ITV's coverage peaked at 6.1 million viewers, while Sky News' coverage peaked at just over 600,000.

Initial figures for the combined BBC and ITV coverage sees the wedding become one of the all-time top ten televised events.

In 1981, the Royal Wedding of the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer was watched by 28.4 million.

Princess Diana's funeral in 1997 was watched by 32.1 million and the 1966 World Cup final, England v West Germany, was watched by 32.3 million.

It is estimated over 8,500 journalists and broadcasters attended, bringing the event to a huge worldwide audience.

Police also estimate that around one million people lined the streets along the wedding procession from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace.

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Royal Wedding: Kate’s Ivory Gown For Sweet William


ROYAL bride Kate Middleton’s wedding dress is an ivory gown with lace applique floral detail designed by Sarah Burton at Alexander McQueen, it was announced today.

Made of ivory and white satin gazar, the skirt resembles “an opening flower” with white satin gazar arches and pleats.

And Kate’s bridal flowers contain a touching tribute to her husband to-be - her bouquet includes sweet William.

The dress’s beautiful, intricate train measures just two metres 70 centimetres - modest in comparison to many previous royal brides.

The train and bodice are decorated with delicate lace applique flowers, handcrafted using the Carrickmacross lace-making technique, which originated in Ireland in the 1820s.

St James’s Palace said the bride chose British brand Alexander McQueen for the “beauty of its craftsmanship” and its “respect for traditional workmanship and the technical construction of clothing”.

Kate worked closely with Burton, who was widely speculated to have won the coveted job to create the historic bridal gown, on the design.

“She had a vision in mind that she wanted to support the Arts and Crafts tradition,” St James’s Palace said.

The Arts and Crafts tradition advocated truth to materials and traditional craftsmanship using simple forms and often Romantic styles of decoration.

The dress’s lace design incorporates the rose, thistle, daffodil and the shamrock - the four floral emblems of the United Kingdom.

The soon-to-be Duchess of Cambridge, who usually wears her hair fully down, choose a “Demi Chignon” for her wedding day instead.

Her tiara - the little known 1936 Cartier “halo” - was her “something borrowed” and was loaned to the bride by The Queen, a tradition for royal weddings.

The veil, which falls to just below her waist, is made of layers of soft, ivory silk tulle and is decorated with a trim of hand-embroidered flowers.

The top secret dress, which up to two billion people watching across the world were waiting to see, has sleeves - appropriate for a religious wedding in the holy surrounds of Westminster Abbey.

Kate’s ivory satin bodice, which is narrowed at the waist and padded at the hips, draws on the Victorian tradition of corsetry - a hallmark of Alexander McQueen’s designs.

Down the back are 58 gazar and organza covered buttons fastened by Rouleau loops.

The underskirt is made of silk tulle trimmed with Cluny lace.

The lace applique for the bodice and skirt was hand-made by the Royal School of Needlework, based at Hampton Court Palace.

Workers washed their hands every 30 minutes to keep the lace and threads pristine, and the needles were renewed every three hours, to keep them sharp and clean.

Individual flowers were hand-cut from English lace and French Chantilly lace and hand-engineered onto ivory silk tulle to create a “unique and organic” design, St James’s Palace said.

With the lace coming from different sources, great care had to be take to ensure that each flower was an absolutely identical colour.

Kate’s shoes were also hand-crafted by the Alexander McQueen team.

Made of ivory duchesse satin, they also featured lace - hand-embroidered by the Royal School of Needlework.

The bride’s earrings were a touching wedding day gift from her parents, Carole and Michael Middleton.

They were created by Robinson Pelham and are diamond-set stylised oak leaves with a pear-shaped diamond set drop and a pave set diamond acorn suspended in the centre.

They were inspired by the Middleton family’s new coat of arms, which includes acorns and oak leaves and was created to echo the tiara.

The earrings are the bride’s “something new”. For her “something blue” - a blue ribbon was sewn into the interior of her dress, while her “something old” is the traditional Carrickmacross craftsmanship used to create the bridal gown.

Kate Middleton’s bridal flowers are a shield-shaped wired bouquet of sweet William, as well as myrtle, lily-of-the-valley and hyacinth.

Source Link:-  http://www.derbyshiretimes.co.uk

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Prince William, Kate At Westminster For Rehearsal


Prince William and Kate Middleton took part in a final wedding rehearsal at Westminster Abbey.

St. James's Palace said that the couple, the bride's parents and Prince Harry were at the abbey with senior clergy for the private rehearsal.

Wednesday's rehearsal was the couple's last chance to run through the service before their wedding Friday.

British police said guests at the wedding will have to pass through security checks to enter the abbey.

Police would not say what methods will be used. Some 5,000 police will be deployed at the wedding and 60 people have been barred as part of their bail conditions from entering the area.

Metropolitan Police Commander Christine Jones said that there is no intelligence suggesting any new terrorist threats against the royal wedding. She said Internet chatter is being monitored and asks the public to be on alert for suspicious behaviour.

Jones said police will able to use special stop-and-search powers Friday while monitoring crowds along the parade route and at Buckingham Palace.

Earlier Wednesday, hundreds of troops paraded through the empty streets of London in a dawn rehearsal for their ceremonial role during the Royal Wedding.

The walkthrough saw army, navy and air force personnel in full uniform lining the route Prince William and Kate Middleton will follow between Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey.

Mounted troops of the Household Cavalry escorted a horse-drawn carriage.

Starting at about 5 a.m. local time, the troops practised and timed their roles to the second for Friday's celebrations — but without the crowds expected on the day.

Organizers said the dress rehearsal went without a hitch.

The venerable abbey will be closed to visitors Wednesday and Thursday in preparation for the wedding.

Source Link:- http://www.cbc.ca/


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