Showing posts with label Prinsjesdag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prinsjesdag. Show all posts

19 September 2018

Royal Event of the Day: Dutch Royals at Prinsjesdag 2018

Get your hats ready, it's Prinsjesdag time! King Willem-Alexander addresses the government every September, reading a speech from the throne detailing plans for the coming session; he's accompanied by Queen Máxima, Prince Constantijn, and Princess Laurentien. For those not familiar, this event features a dress code that was popular for big royal events many years ago but which has become increasingly rare: long dresses, orders, and hats for the ladies. No tiaras because this is a day event.

Embed from Getty Images
Queen Máxima goes all out for Prinsjesdag with a special outfit. This year's outfit is...

NOS screencap
...well, it's impressive, really...

Embed from Getty Images
...because I would not have thought...

Louisa Beccaria Iridescent Multicolor Georgette Long Dress, per ModeKoninginMaxima
...that a candidate for my least favorite Máxima Prinsjesdag outfit ever would be so...bland, honestly?

Embed from Getty Images
It's too much and not enough for me. There's so much happening in the overly vertical hat with unrelated feathers and the fussy neck and sleeves, but underneath it all is a muted pastel color blocking thing that just doesn't do much. Suffice it to say, I won't be remembering this year's edition when it comes time for the bests of 2018.

Embed from Getty Images
Princess Laurentien opted for a tried-and-true combination for this sort of dress code: the long jacket over a matching sleek long dress. Very elegant! And I need hardly tell you that she picks up multiple bonus points for highlighting an accent color from the fabric with her purse and shoes.

NOS screencap
Also, nice beard, Prince Constantijn.

20 September 2017

Royal Event of the Day: Dutch Royals at Prinsjesdag 2017

Programming Note: The blog returns on Monday. 

It's time for Prinsjesdag! The Dutch monarch addresses the government every September, reading a speech from the throne detailing plans for the coming session. Queen Máxima, Prince Constantijn, and Princess Laurentien all accompany King Willem-Alexander for the event. It's a special occasion with a special dress code - a throwback of sorts, with long dresses, orders, and hats, which was a much more common formal day dress code for royal events years ago - and that usually adds up to Máxima maxing out with a specially coordinated outfit. It's often one of her sartorial highlights of the year. And this year {drumroll please}...

Embed from Getty Images
...{sad clatter of drumsticks dropped half-heartedly on the floor} This year was, you know, fine. Listen, it's perfectly nice! A workhorse solution to this dress code, basically.

Embed from Getty Images
It's also just a longer, slate blue/gray version of a Natan dress that Queen Máxima and her Natan twin, Queen Mathilde, already own in pink. Which is a bit of an anticlimactic choice for a special event, you know what I mean? Disappointed by my own overly high expectations, AGAIN. I think there are better ways to do subdued, if that's what she was after (and, as always, there are many reasons she may have been after that).

NOS screencap
The use of aquamarine gems from Queen Juliana threw a bit of color interest into the ensemble. And adding a diamond necklace from the royal vaults is a little bit more jewel power than Máxima usually gives us for this occasion; it is during the day, after all, hence why there are no tiaras.

NOS screencap
Maybe she was hedging her bets a bit with bonus diamonds, just in case her dress didn't bowl us over. That's a solution I can get behind.

Embed from Getty Images
Even Princess Laurentien feels a little subdued this year, no? Her dress is from Hardies, jacquard with a mermaid scale feel. The two Dutch ladies make a bit of a twin act, in these two belted dresses with their brimless hats.

NOS screencap
But of course, Laurentien's hat is a tilted not-hat hat, because there has to be a little Laurentien touch in there somewhere, right?

21 September 2016

Royal Event of the Day: September 21

Yesterday was Prinsjesdag in the Netherlands, when the monarch reads his speech from the throne to the government, and - relevant to our purposes - the Dutch royal ladies get all dressed up. It's usually a yearly highlight for Queen Máxima, but was it this year? LET'S DISCUSS:

(Hang on, bear with me for a second as I do my traditional explanation for those unfamiliar with this style of dress.) Hats with long skirts/dresses and sashes are the dress code for the day for the women, something that used to be pretty common at formal royal events, but which has died out over the years. No tiaras, because this is a day event; no sashes for the men, because those aren't worn with morning dress. Willem-Alexander, before becoming king, wore a uniform and used a sash with that. Now he wears a small order pin on his lapel, as does Prince Constantijn. (Okay, NOW let's discuss.)

Queen Máxima chose Claes Iversen as her designer for the day. She opted for a blue blouse tucked into a long golden skirt with blue embellishments and topped the whole thing with one of her favorite giant hats from Fabienne Delvigne. My first thought? This is what dressing for your sash looks like - she's all in tune with the Order of the Netherlands Lion here.

My second thought? If last year was the closest she's come to eveningwear territory at this event, this is a hard swing back to daywear, from the skirt+shirt combo to the sizable hat. Is it a swing for the better or a swing for the worse? I'm honestly not sure. I preferred last year's look, but she set the bar epically high for herself after that.

The best thing here is the best thing nearly every year: the jewels, of course. Those lusciously giant sapphire earrings and Queen Wilhelmina's huge sapphire bow brooch at her waist! The belt buckle placement is probably partly practical (big brooches are a tough sell on tops with no structure), and it is entirely genius with this outfit. Plus, if you ever need a reminder to sit up straight...

But wait, there's more! Prince Constantijn and Princess Laurentien were in attendance as usual, Laurentien sporting one of the family's bug brooches and big earrings previously worn by Máxima. Her sash is that of the Order of the House of Orange.

Whereas Máxima's Prinsjesdag outfits are clearly geared toward future gala gear reuse, her sister-in-law is stocking up for any future chain mail needs. And given her history with interesting fabrics at this event (last year, she went all Missoni-esque in a chevron knit; the year before, it was formal corduroy), she's right on brand. As ever, we commend her for keeping it interesting for us.

Photos: NOS screencaps, via Getty Images as indicated

02 February 2016

Royal Flashback of the Day: February 2

Princess Beatrix turned 78 on January 31, which means it's time for a vintage fashion flashback! I've been looking at some of her Prinsjesdag outfits from the early 1960s (as one does), and there are some gems to be discussed. This is a time when the long dress + hat daytime dress code wasn't so rare, and it's nice to see outfits that are a little more day and a little less evening gowns on daytime duty.

1965, with Princess Margriet and Princess Christina
ANP - Ben Hansen / ANP Archief via Creative Commons
Also, there are the hats. This is...possibly furry with a big bow in the middle? I love it and its matching dress.

1964, with Princess Margriet
ANP - ANP Foundation / ANP Archief via Creative Commons
Speaking of furry. Now that's a hat, amirite? And just a taste of the signature big hat style that was to come later on, too.

But it's not just all about the hats. Early 1960s Prinsjesdag also delivers one of my all-time favorite Princess Beatrix outfits:
1961, with Princess Irene, Princess Margriet, and Princess Christina
ANP - Nfp / ANP Archief via Creative Commons
This is the sort of thing that I wish would reappear today, while also knowing that it (and that tricky tea length) might be best left to its time. But for a flashback, its pretty much perfection, no?

16 September 2015

Royal Event of the Day: September 16

Yesterday was Prinsjesdag, or Prince's Day, when King Willem-Alexander addresses the Dutch parliament to outline the government's plans for the coming session. It's definitely my favorite royal September event, because who doesn't love a good government speech delivered in a language you don't speak? (Me! Me!) (Not me.) No, my true love is an old dress code that allows for a little flair in the sartorial department, and when you combine that with Queen Máxima, you never know what you'll get.

But you do know that she'll give you something to talk about, and we need to talk about this dress. It's from Jan Taminiau, and it is hand-painted silk organza accented with different types of embroidery and beading, all inspired by the Japanese room at Huis ten Bosch Palace. Having a dress made in the theme of a room from one of your many residences should really be the dictionary definition of couture.

The Prinsjesdag dress code is a sort of court dress, which was once much more popular for royal events but survives here in the form of long gowns, sashes, and hats for the royal ladies. It means that there's always a fine line to walk between dressing for a day event, which this is (hence no tiaras), and an evening event, for which most of these dresses were really made. Máxima walks the line every year, but this might be the closest she's come to pure eveningwear territory. 

Certainly the fact that she opted for a subtle floral headpiece (you can't see it here, alas) instead of a hat is causing some of that, but I think the larger reason is that this dress is very clearly designed for the tiara events it will see after this day is done. Most of her Prinsjesdag dresses do turn up at state banquets and other tiara occasions later on, after all. I'll be curious to see which jewels she'll pair with it in the future, after her interesting berry picks this time around. In the mean time, I think we have another contender for Máxima's best of the year.

The King's brother, Prince Constantijn, and his wife, Princess Laurentien, also attend Prinsjesdag.
You also never know what you'll get with Laurentien, and, well, I sure wouldn't have bet on a green zigzagged knit with cape sleeves. The dress is by Hardies, and she paired it with emerald and diamond jewels, a pair of earrings previously worn by Máxima, her Order of the House of Orange sash, and a beige hat.
She always keeps it interesting, you have to love her for that. Even when not a one of those interesting things goes with any of those other interesting things.

Photos: via Getty Images and NOS screencaps

17 September 2014

Royal Event of the Day: September 17

Ah, Prinsjesdag: that wonderful September day when we all gather around and patiently explain old fashioned dress codes to each other (and when the Dutch sovereign gives a budget speech to parliament, but this is a shiny happy place, so we won't worry about that). I always look forward to events that keep the old court dress style alive (meaning long dresses and hats - but not tiaras, because this is not an evening event - for the ladies, once a common way of dress for formal royal events, but now growing scarce). But this year's event left me with a case of the mehs, I'm afraid to say. A bright red outfit shouldn't leave me with a mere shrug, and yet:
The flower arrangement next to the King is looking very Christmas tree-esque. You could hide a person in there. If this was The Princess Diaries 3, you would hide a person in there. Yeah, you can tell when the outfits aren't doing it for me, because I have drifted to the flowers. My floral musings typically don't extend past pretty/not pretty. Very sophisticated, I know.
Okay, to the clothes: Queen Máxima is wearing a Valentino silk-gazar gown with a Fabienne Delvigne hat and Miu Miu shoes. She is red from top to toe, including her gloves, and it is...a lot of red. It fits her beautifully, but the solid red background basically just reminds me that I'm not a huge fan of red together with the blue and orange of her Order of the Netherlands Lion sash.
I could have been on board with the red as an excuse to pile on the rubies, but Máx went instead with diamonds and pearls. This is a pretty modest level of jewelry for Máxima, really. Luscious, of course, but fairly average on the MAX scale.
Also present were Prince Constantijn and Princess Laurentien, and (per ModekoninginMaxima) Laurentien wore a dress from Talbot Runhof. A dress made from...wait for it...CORDUROY! About the least formal fabric I can think of, apart from denim. And yet, I gotta say, it absolutely works. Her modification of the dress to a shorter sleeve definitely helps. The dress is dark enough to pass for navy or black, but it is aubergine, a wonderful pairing with her Order of the House of Orange sash. She finished the look with a hat close enough to her own hair color to trick me into thinking she might have rocked up in a glorious faux bouffant 'do for about half a second.
Maybe a big old bouffant would have done the trick to pull me out of the mehs. I could just deal with the fact that I miss the presence of Princess Beatrix and Princess Margriet, and the King in his grand uniform, but suggesting a major fake hairdo seems a more logical choice. Yeah. 

Are you finding anything to fall in love with here?


Photos: Pool/Getty Images, NOS video, Net-a-porter, Mark Cuthbert/UK Press/Getty Images, Talbot Runhof

18 September 2013

Royal Fashion Awards: Prinsjesdag 2013

Prinsjesdag made me a little sad yesterday, guys. We're not only missing Queen Princess Beatrix from the festivities now, but Princess Margriet and her husband Pieter van Vollenhoven too. Such a small group, only the King, Queen, Prince Constantijn, and Princess Laurentien. Oh well. The pomp remains, and so do our (pared-down) awards.

Video: Prinsjesdag in action

Most Metallic
Queen Máxima
It was Jan Taminiau once again for Máxima, a gold frock with a studded diamond design that grew in size as her dress neared the floor. I'm all for sparkle and I'm all for covering oneself in gold, but I also think this looks like super fancy modern chainmail. Like, swap the clutch for a sword and she'd really be in business.

Most in Need of a Uniform
King Willem-Alexander
Video: The speech
Yes, I know. There are reasons the King has abandoned his military uniform-wearing ways. But I have reserved the right to be fully superficial in this space, and so I say: Booooo! Bring it back! Prince Constantijn was in morning dress too, as he always is, but I missed the presence of at least one royal gent with uniform and sash blazing. Nevertheless, he did do well with the speech and all. I mean, I don't speak the language or anything, but he's got a good voice, no? Kingly.

Most Evening
Princess Laurentien
Some of you remarked on our recent Prinsjesdag flashback that you felt the dresses were a little too obviously evening gowns with hats on top, and so they usually are - after all, we are out of the court dress habit these days. It usually doesn't bother me (why not get a gown that you can also wear later on?), but this one is a little too obviously evening for me. Maybe that's because we've already seen it in evening mode, during the inauguration festivities.

Who was your Prinsjesdag favorite?

Photos: Pool/Getty Images/ANP/NOS

13 September 2013

Flashback Friday: Máxima at Prinsjesdag

It's nearly time for one of my favorite annual royal events: Prinsjesdag! The Dutch sovereign gives the Speech from the Throne in front of a joint session of parliament, but more importantly (for us in our frivolous mode, at least) there is the fashion. Prinsjesdag still follows an old dress code that used to be quite popular at royal events: long day dresses with orders and hats for the ladies, plus uniform or morning dress for the gents. Today, a look at what Máxima wore to the event during her princess years, with her years as Queen Máx still to come.

The ubiquitous Belgian house of Natan is very popular, as it always is, but since Prinsjesdag often requires some bespoke work, I think the results are greatly improved. Recent years have seen the creeping in of Dutch design, including a one-off appearance in purple Herbert Rouwers (not a typical choice of designer for her) and a run of Jan Taminiau. There's even a shout out to Máxima's home country in the form of 2004's outfit by Argentine designer Benito Fernandez.
The brighter colors draw me in (2007, you look so sadly tame and out of place) - 2003's maternity turn will always be a favorite - but still 2006's crisp white jacket and full black skirt are winning everything here for me. A dress code like this means a lot of look no matter what you throw on, so clean lines make such a world of difference and their absence sticks out in other years (2008, hello - how much do I want to love the purple year, and yet I can't!).

Which outfit is your favorite?

Photos: ANP/Belga/Getty Images/DutchPhotoPress/PPE/Reuters

19 September 2012

Prinsjesdag 2012

It’s Prinsjesdag time! That’s the annual Budget Day in the Netherlands, where Queen Beatrix visits Parliament and gives a speech from the throne, and she and her kin bust out their gloriously old fashioned daywear and a little dose of day bling. It's morning coat or uniform for the men, and long dresses plus orders and hats for the royal ladies (no tiaras, because we're still in the daytime) - a once popular royal dress code that faded away decades ago, but is still kicking once a year in the Netherlands. Bless.

Best in Froof
Queen Beatrix
I simply don’t know anyone else that would wear a big ol’ lace dress and top it with a feather duster. Nor do I know anyone else that could pull it off, so props to the Queen Bea.


Best in Color
Princess Máxima
You’d think it’d be hard to detract from Beatrix in her all her froofy glory, or the gold coach, or the uniformed prince at her side – but no. Leave it to Máx. Interestingly, she's not sporting a new dress this year, but a repeat from last year's state visit to Qatar. (On the sparkle front, note that both Beatrix and Máxima are sporting multiple diamond stars. Also note that Beatrix is sporting even more of them than Máxima is, because Máx may be the brightly dressed magpie, but Bea is Da Queen.)

Best Dress
Princess Laurentien
Out of them all, Laurentien’s dress is the one I like the best. (I know, I can't believe it either.) The color is the perfect background for her riband, and the cut is simple but effective with its sleeve detail and asymmetrical skirt fabrics. And it does have that little touch of Laurentien quirk in the back, with the connecting sleeves. I could do without the flower on her head positioned so as to act like a pirate’s eye patch in certain photos, but you know. You win some, you lose some.

Best in Class
Princess Margriet
What can you say? Margriet – Queen Beatrix’s sister – is well turned out as always. Not loud, not attention grabbing, just classy.

Best in Gents
Pieter van Vollenhoven
Left to right: Prince Constantijn, Pieter van Vollenhoven, Prince Willem-Alexander
First of all, it must be said that it is practically impossible for the men to go wrong with this dress code, and they all look dashing as can be. Despite my weakness for a good uniform, I've got to give this one to Margriet's husband, Professor Pieter. He's got a little orange pocket square! Adorable.

Who’s your Prinsjesdag favorite this year?

Photos: Getty Images/PPE/DutchPhotoPress/Bauer Griffin

23 September 2011

Flashback Friday: Laurentien at Prinsjesdag

As promised, today's flashback is more Prinsjesdag fun. But first, I've gotten several questions about the dress code, so I thought I'd address those first (there are some answers in the comments on the Prinsjesdag post too). The Prinsjesdag dress code is as follows: military uniforms or morning coats for the men, with long day dresses plus orders and hats for the ladies. Tiaras aren't worn because this is a day event, and tiaras are reserved for evening events (usually). It might seem strange because we're used to seeing ladies with long dresses and tiaras these days, but it's actually not strange - it was a very common dress code up until a few decades ago. Look back to the major royal events of years gone by, and this is precisely what royal ladies will be wearing. Favor switched to shorter, more casual outfits for the women over time, but Prinsjesdag never changed. And though the jewel fiend in me wouldn't mind them going full out like their British counterparts and throwing on tiaras, this is a nice throwback.

Daily sidebar over, my original intent for today's post was to talk about Máxima's Prinsjesdag outfits over the years. But then this year's event happened, and, well, it was a teensy bit boring. We need some entertainment, and for that, we need to call on one person: Princess Laurentien. Hit it, L.:

In the beginning were the dull outfits. Laurentien's first Prinsjesdag was in 2001, and she started out as I suppose any new in-law would: playing it safe, testing the waters. As the years went on, her unique sense of style truly started to emerge. First, a little bit of lopsided orange velvet; then an exploration in to the wonders of leather (or pleather? or vinyl? Please don't let it be vinyl.); and finally a print explosion on a most curious silhouette. (Speaking of that silhouette, somebody needs to confirm for me that that is a skirt and not a pair of righteous bell bottoms. Because I can't really tell, and it's bothering me.)(UPDATE: Yes, they are bell bottoms. OH LAURENTIEN.)

A-HA! This is what I'm talking about. Four years in, and she lets her true sartorial flag fly. This is like some sort of evil mermaid Queen costume, and it is awesome.

The prints may be gone, but the nuttiness lives on! I have no problem with corsets, really. This, however, looks like one of those belts that you wear for safety while lifting, custom-dyed for outfit cohesion. And though I'm sure Prinsjesdag presents its own challenges in the form of keeping one's eyes open through an entire governmental speech, I really don't think it involves any heavy lifting.

On the one hand, this is lovely; on the other, it's half lingerie. So, there's that.

Hee! Here we have some another nightie, but this time from Pioneer days...in Hawaii. And thermal underwear underneath! And a stack of tissue paper crepes on top! This is why I count on Laurentien to bring the giggles.

See, even when she takes the elegant route (crazy good, that coat and dress), she has to funk it up with the headpiece of a windblown dinosaur bird. (Obligatory points awarded for the major sapphires on display, of course.)

You can't expect a person to dress one way all the time, I know that. Laurentien has plenty of sane moments (there's her gold star, of course, plus these recent appearances sent in by reader Heleen). But you come to expect certain things; and from Laurentien on Prinjesdag I expect some interest. Even if it is just a crazy bright color. So it's not so much that her 2011 outfit is bad...it's just a bit of an entertainment let down. Ya know?

Which is your favorite year?

Photos: ANP/Seeger/PPE/Getty Images/Daylife/Dutch Photo Press

20 September 2011

Royal Fashion Awards: Prinsjesdag 2011

Ready for some Dutch fun today, my friends? It's time for Prinsjesdag, where Queen Beatrix gives her annual speech, Parliament's session is opened, the ladies wear some of the fanciest outfits they'll sport all year, and we give out some royal fashion awards:

Best Effort
Queen Beatrix
The Queen Bee turned up in her regular uniform of upholstery fabric with a spaceship on top. But look, she's added some flair for the occasion: a lion's mane of feathery whatnot. You have to appreciate the effort, at least.


Worst Contrast
Princess Máxima
My favorite magpie compensated for the fact that she's not allowed to wear a tiara with a dress covered in sparkly glass beads, which she inexplicably topped with Indiana Jones's hat. I know Indy dresses mostly in dull dirt-covered beige, but this is more of a washed out shade of seafoam.

Most Tame
Princess Laurentien
She's almost unrecognizable, this is so tame. I mean, she does appear to have a sand dollar complete with sea refuse on her head, but still: this is tame. In fact, both she and Máxima are totally boring me today. Where's the color, ladies?

Best Color
Princess Margriet
Here we go. Thank heavens for Princess Margriet, who must psychically know just what we need and just when we need it. Automatic best-dressed of the day.

Who's catching your eye at Prinsjesdag this year?

Photos: Daylife/Reuters/Lehtikuva/PPE/Nieboer/ddp/Langbehn

21 September 2010

Royal Fashion Awards: Prinsjesdag 2010

The Dutch royal family was out in force today for Prinsjesdag (where Queen Beatrix gives a budget speech and opens a new year of parliament).  This event has a most curious dress code: the ladies wear long dresses along with their orders - but with hats.  Every year I cross my fingers in the hopes that they'll just go ahead and upgrade to a full-on tiara event, but you know me - any royal event without bling is a missed opportunity indeed.  (Priorities, people.)  Well, we'll work with what we have...


Most True to Form
Perhaps Beatrix should adopt this mixed dress code for her every day (and night) wear - she always seems to look her best for Prinsjesdag.  She's working a very flattering silhouette here.  Sure, you've got your standard UMO (Unidentified Millinery Object) topping the whole thing off, but without that nobody would recognize her.

Best Museum Steal
Maxima must be pilfering from the nearest sartorial exhibition, because this is straight up My Fair Lady.  In fact, change the color and make that hat a little larger and you'd have an extra fresh from the set of the Black and White Ascot.  Or maybe I just have to envision her as a character because the sheer daintiness of this outfit is so unexpected.  What's she done with the big, bold Maxima that we've come to expect?  Maybe that's what the hat's all about.

Most Retina-Searing
Where are my complimentary sunglasses, Laurentien?  That's a whole lotta pink.  Throw in the orange sash and you've got a seizure of color so potent it should come with a medical warning. 

Worst Absence
Mabel.  Sadly, she does not attend Prinsjesdag (or at least she hasn't that I'm aware of - I'm sure one of you lovelies will correct me if I'm wrong here).  Man, just think of the craziness she'd bring to an event like this...

Best Way to Show 'Em How It's Done
Princess Margriet knows what's up, see.  She doesn't need a costume or anything capable of giving the crowd an epileptic seizure to steal this show.  Simple, flattering, appropriate, and a win without competition.  Well done.

Who won this year's Prinsjesdag fashion stakes for you?