Showing posts with label Peter Pilotto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Pilotto. Show all posts

12 October 2018

Princess Eugenie & Jack’s Wedding: The Bride and Bridal Party


We’ve done a deep dive on the tiara surprise at Princess Eugenie’s wedding to Jack Brooksbank; click here for all of the posts on this wedding.

The Bride
© MOD Crown copyright 2018
Princess Eugenie revealed in a pre-wedding interview that she was using a British-based designer for her wedding gown. British-based rather than just British set off a guessing game that was heavy on Erdem and very light on the actual correct answer: Peter Pilotto and Christopher De Vos, founders of the British-based label Peter Pilotto. (Pilotto is Austrian and Italian; De Vos is Belgian and Peruvian.)

Royal Family screencap
I associate Peter Pilotto with innovative use of prints in intriguing silhouettes, something brought to life in royal wedding gown format through complicated construction and a custom jacquard fabric. The fabric was designed by Pilotto and De Vos to include several meaningful motifs: thistles for Scotland because the couple is fond of Balmoral, shamrocks for Ireland as a nod to the Ferguson family, York roses, and ivy since the couple live in Ivy Cottage at Kensington Palace. Those symbols were crafted into “a garland of rope like motifs, woven into a jacquard of silk, cotton and viscose blend.” The design was then translated into a jacquard weave in Italy.

© MOD Crown copyright 2018
The silhouette was identified after the designers researched previous dresses worn by members of the royal family, with close involvement from Princess Eugenie. The dress is constructed in multiple layers, including a corset, a complex underskirt, a fitted bodice, and a full pleated skirt.

© MOD Crown copyright 2018
The neckline folds around the shoulders and dips into a low back. Eugenie specifically requested a low back because she wanted the scar from her scoliosis surgery at age 12 to be on full display. "I think you can change the way beauty is, and you can show people your scars and I think it's really special to stand up for that," she said in an interview before the wedding. She’s been very open about her battle with scoliosis; she’s patron of the hospital where she had her surgery. It’s a powerful statement. Quite a beautiful one as well.

Royal Family screencap
She went without a veil; a veil would have covered up the scar – and probably would have turned into a logistical nightmare, given the wind was snatching hats left and right today. The veil-free choice was all the better to display the best part of the gown: the full-length train. The back view was simply stunning, perfect for standing at the altar and walking down an aisle as grand as St. George’s Chapel. I didn’t love the neckline, but whatever it took to get to that low back is worth it.

Royal Family screencap
The wedding was the first time we’ve seen Princess Eugenie in a tiara and she certainly made a splash: the Greville Emerald Kokoshnik Tiara was a mystery before the wedding and hadn’t been previously worn by a member of the royal family. We’ve covered it in depth here. She paired the tiara with diamond and emerald earrings which were a gift from her new husband. Her wedding shoes were satin peep-toe heels by Charlotte Olympia.

Embed from Getty Images
The bouquet was created by Patrice Van Helden Oakes, sister of Rob Van Helden, the main floral designer for the wedding. It included Lily of the Valley, Stephanotis pips, hints of baby blue thistles, white spray roses and trailing ivy, in addition to the traditional sprigs of myrtle from Osbourne House. That tradition goes back to Queen Victoria.


The Bridesmaids, Page Boys, and Special Attendant
Embed from Getty Images
Blue and green were the big colors in this wedding, something emphasized by the outfits of the bridesmaids and page boys. These were designed by Amaia Arrieta of Amaia Kids. The colorful sashes around their waists are patterned with the same Mark Bradford artwork included in the Order of Service. A playful detail in action that I assume is also of some meaning to the couple.

Royal Family screencap
Lady Louise Mountbatten-Windsor was a special attendant in the bridal party, a.k.a. the designated wrangler of all the young ones. Unfortunately it's a bit difficult to find a decent pic of her (at the time I'm writing this), but she hit a nice note between grown up guest and color-coordinated bridal party member with her Claudie Pierlot dress Emily London hat.


The Maid of Honor and Mother of the Bride
© MOD Crown copyright 2018
Princess Beatrice was named Maid of Honor. Rather than the position of train-wrangler in a matching gown you might have expected, it seems to have been more of a special designation for someone close to the bride. Beatrice wore a royal blue outfit from Ralph and Russo and a hat by Sarah Cant, plus a diamond buggy brooch on her side. Can we get MORE RALPH AND RUSSO for her, uh, right now?! She looked very sharp indeed.

Royal Family screencap
Sarah, Duchess of York was also quite sharp, I thought, in her green outfit by Emma Louise Design and a statement hat from Jess Collett Hats. She also had a meaningful touch in her outfit: her vintage Manolo Blahnik bag was carried by her own mother, the late Susan Barrantes, at Sarah and Andrew’s wedding in 1986. Sweet touches all over, just how it should be.

28 September 2016

Royal Outfit Grab Bag of the Day: September 28

I love it when royals get together and I love it when they unknowingly coordinate themselves at the same time. A unified color scheme kicks off our latest grab bag edition:

While in New York last week, Crown Princess Victoria and Queen Rania attended the 2016 Global Goals Awards Dinner.
The blacks and whites and grays ruled the day here. Queen Rania has one of my favoritest ever Peter Pilotto dresses, but even that's not enough to distract me from Victoria's overwhelming jewelry set. Imma need at least the necklace subtracted here.
Queen Rania's Peter Pilotto dress, Crown Princess Victoria's Baum und Pferdgarden skirt (previously worn here)

Queen Rania attended an event for the Royal Health Awareness Society.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BKsCvo_AQkq/?taken-by=queenrania
Queen Rania Instagram
Speaking of Queen Rania and speaking of black and white outfits, how great is this? The more stripey goodness, the merrier, I say.

Crown Princess Mary attended the Design Awards 2016 last week.
Feels like Mary's also been all about the prints n' patterns lately, right? I think this is a pretty successful version. Or at least I would think it was a successful version, if I could stop thinking that top yellow flower is some giant pesky name tag. I've apparently been compromised by whatever Victoria was so dutifully sporting at the top of our post.
Alice + Olivia dress (thanks to Heaven)
Mary and Fred are on a working visit to Washington, D.C. and Boston at the moment, by the way, so cross your fingers for something fab.

23 December 2015

Year in Review: The 2015 Bonus Edition

We've covered our major players and their best outfits of the year, but there's a world of sartorial splendor beyond that bunch. My favorites from other royal ladies in 2015:

Princess Madeleine: Multiple Events
Princess Madeleine absolutely killed it this year, in beautifully soft Elie Saab perfectly customized for her about-to-burst status at her brother's wedding, sophisticated Valentino for her son's christening, and detailed gray Fadi El Khoury at the Nobel Prize ceremony. A serious run of gold star-worthy moments.

Princess Tatiana: Prince Carl Philip's Wedding
Royal weddings continue to be the gift that keeps on giving. In stunning couture by Celia Kritharioti, Princess Tatiana continued her run of A+ royal wedding appearances at the summer Swedish wedding to earn a well-deserved spot on my year-end best list.

The Countess of Wessex: Prince Carl Philip's Wedding
Her ever-increasing fashion game earns Sophie a spot on the best list, and go figure, I'm picking once again from that Swedish wedding. This dove gray gown by Taťána Kovaříková is not only flattering, it's the best platform yet for her aquamarine necklace tiara to shine.

Princess Charlene: Princess Grace Awards Gala
I couldn't tell you what it was about this Dior Couture gown that I loved so much on Princess Charlene when she wore it and I still can't, but I can tell you that I'm still in love. There several high points from the Monaco bunch this year, particularly Beatrice Borromeo (just all around, but especially her magnificent evening ensemble during her wedding festivities) and Charlotte Casiraghi in Gucci at Cannes.

Princess Beatrice: Royal Ascot
For abandoning the sea of fascinators and perchers and whatever you want to call 'ems for a hat with an actual top on it and a delicious color contrast, Princess Beatrice at Ascot in Beulah London and Laura Apsit Livens must make my best list. I'll throw in a nod here too for her sister, Princess Eugenie, whose Ascot moments included the best royal appearance in patterned Peter Pilotto I've seen yet.

I could go on, but I'm calling it here. That's it! That's our Year in Review, done and dusted. Any looks you're still lusting after that didn't make my cut?

P.S.: Over at the Vault, there's a long look at the Duchess of Cornwall's most sparkling moments of the year, and still to come is my annual wrap up of the Queen's year in jewels, including her favorite brooches by the numbers.

Photos: SVT screencaps and via Getty Images

22 June 2015

Royal Fashion Awards: Royal Ascot 2015, Days 4 & 5

The last two days of Royal Ascot did taper off in terms of royal attendance, but they also gave us the most Ascot-y of our royal Ascot hats this year, so it's a trade off. Let's finish this party up: 

Best in Coordination
The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh (Day 5)
Check that tie-to-outfit coordination. Not too matchy-matchy, just right. Awww. (You can of course see Her Maj on Day 4 as well as all brooch info at the Vault.)

Best Comeback
Zara Phillips (Day 4)
Bouncing right back from a yellow number that made people ask all the wrong questions earlier in the week, this is simple but just the right silhouette for Zara. Lovely. Also, bonus grandmother/granddaughter hang out time:

Worst Step Back
Princess Beatrice (Day 4)
And she was doing so very well on Day 3. Alas, Beatrice - here with her mum and sister - stepped right back in that pile of tooooo muchhhhh that she got stuck in on Day 1, overdoing this skirt (which is already patterned and flared and wrinkled) with a fussy top and ankle straps and koosh ball flowers on her head. Princess Eugenie did it better on Day 3, and is doing it better retro-style here too.

Best Ascot Spirit
Lady Helen Taylor
Let it be known that I do not like bugs on my hats anymore than I like them on my jewelry. But it's Ascot! Someone has to have a little millinery fun. We've seen some big royal hats this year, but I think this is the only one that's really brought the whimsy that one can pull off at the biggest hat parade of the year.

Now that we've reached the end of the Ascot fun, it's time for the final question:

What was your favorite Ascot outfit for 2015?
(Voting for the Yorks on Day 3, myself.)

Photos: via Getty Images as indicated

19 June 2015

Royal Fashion Awards: Royal Ascot 2015, Days 2 & 3

We took a day off from our Ascot coverage, so let's play catch up with a big roundup of royal racegoers:

Best in Gents
The Duke of Edinburgh (Days 2 and 3)
Ascot is my annual time to give the dapper Duke his due. His top hats are "antique", as the Royal Hats Blog explains, which in this case means they're his from fifty years ago. (Princess Anne: "SEE?") For her part, the Queen delighted me with another amazing brooch from Queen Victoria, Prince Albert's Sapphire, and then did an abrupt 180 the next day in a probably modern and hardly as lavish piece, the Shamrock Brooch. I like to think she just wanted us to save up our jumpy claps, knowing that the Duchess of Cornwall was about to pile on pounds of diamonds that evening. Her Maj is gracious like that. (Oh yes, Camilla had a BIG tiara appearance and it is covered at the Vault!)

Best in Comebacks
Princess Beatrice (Day 3) and the Princess Royal (Day 2)
We might as well call this the Triumph of the White Dresses category, because both of these ladies used that simplicity for accessory success after accessory semi-disasters on Day 1. Beatrice continued to play with color - and with handbags - and I adore it. I also adore Anne with a scarf draped gracefully over her shoulders.
Beatrice's dress from Beulah London, hat from Laura Apsit Livens

Biggest Statements in Patterns
Princess Alexandra (Day 2) and The Princess Royal (Day 3)
Alexandra will win you over to her festival of paisley with her cheery smile and her festive hat trim; Anne will simply dare you compare her to a luxury carpet with her steely gaze. But they both come out pretty well in the end.

Biggest Statement in Feathers
Princess Michael (Day 2) and The Countess of Wessex (Day 3)
Positively swashbuckling, these two - in other words, perfect for Ascot. Well done. (The Countess of Wessex Blog explains that Sophie's Jane Taylor hat looks like a slight remix from a previous Ascot appearance, with some extra stuff added. Can't ever get enough extra stuff to stick on your Ascot hat.)

Best in Couture
Princess Haya (Day 2) and Princess Marie-Chantal (Day 3)
Princess Haya continued her couture Ascot run in Chanel Couture with a Philip Treacy hat, and on Ladies' Day, Princess Marie-Chantal of Greece joined in the fun also in Chanel Couture and Philip Treacy. I have to say, it's a good combo.
Haya's suit modified from Spring 2015; Marie-Chantal's jacket from Spring 2011

Best in Forehead-Bolters
The Countess of Wessex (Day 2), Autumn Phillips (Day 2), and Princess Eugenie (Day 3)
I was expecting to like this latest batch of Ascot fashions so much. (It is Friday, perhaps I'm feeling generous.) I don't even mind a round of my least favorite sort of hat, the one that doesn't cover much of your head except for maybe parts of your vision because hey who needs that. I like all these three! Sophie's all stripey, Autumn's all springy, and Eugenie's all swingy.
Emilia Wickstead for Sophie; Hobbs for Autumn (h/t Countess of Wessex Blog); Peter Pilotto dress and Helmut Lang blazer for Eugenie
Bonus points to Eugenie for picking just the right shape of blazer to add to that dress. I think this is my favorite Eugenie outfit in a long time, which makes the York sisters my day 2 and 3 faves, which is also something that hasn't happened in a long time. Stranger things have happened at sea...

Who's your Ascot Best Dressed for Days 2 & 3?

Photos: via Getty Images as indicated / Beulah London / Laura Apsit Livens / Style.com / Instagram / ModaOperandi / Hobbs / Saks

05 January 2015

Royal Outfits of the Day: January 5

The Windsor family's own Benjamin Button, the Countess of Wessex, turns 50 this month, and to mark her big birthday, she spoke with the UK edition of Harper's Bazaar.
She's worn a fair few pieces from Peter Pilotto, and the label's signature bold style is well represented here. My favorite of the looks is the red number above, which was also worn recently by Alyssa Milano on the red carpet. And Sophie wore it better, if you ask me.
Two Peter Pilotto dresses and a Nina Ricci coat
I also like the play on patterns in the shot below. The look pairs a textured Nina Ricci coat and another Pilotto printed dress (which the Countess of Wessex blog points out was already worn by Sophie earlier last year; the blog offers these identifications and more).
Of course one of her favorite designers, Emilia Wickstead, is also represented, in a dress modified from the retail version to remove the v-neck (I kind of miss the original neckline, though):
Wearing favorite brands and repeats gives this whole thing a bit of a different spin, I think. Features like this for the senior members of the royal family are not so common, and it feels appropriate that this isn't a version of Sophie we don't recognize, done up in cutting edge designs just for the sake of a photoshoot. Instead, she's portrayed in some of her favorite designers and is posed casually at her home, Bagshot Park. (Well, "casual" for a home that looks like it comes with its own dress code, that is.)
Emilia Wickstead dress, retail version
It's a nice feature, but more than anything it's just nice to see the Countess get some attention for both her work and her style. (And it's nice to see those things without them falling under a headline about some fictional competition within the royal family, honestly.) You can read the Harper's Bazaar feature here and in the February issue of the magazine.

Photos: Harper's Bazaar via Twitter; Lyst; Moda Operandi

18 September 2012

Royal Trip Report: The Wessexes in Canada

The Earl and Countess of Wessex have been on a working visit to Canada for the past week. Unfortunately this trip coincides with the Cambridge trip, and that means even less coverage for Edward and Sophie, but we’re here to help them out. (And by them, I mean Sophie, and some of her outfits. Because that’s how we do.)

They began in Ottawa, where Sophie took a page out of Eugenie’s style book and sported a Peter Pilotto print dress. And just as we learned when Eugenie did it, this is not going to suit the tastes of everyone – nothing with this much statement ever does – but I still applaud her for the youthful spirit. Of more general love I’m sure will be this fantastic red dress worn with a wedge that is as close to delicate as wedges come.

Next up was Nunavut, and this beige coat/dress/thing, and then Iqaluit, where she also wore beige, and then a more of a va va voom turn just to counteract the blergh in sleek black at the Toronto International Film Festival. I’m not usually one for gimmicky handbags, but I’d take that fan off her hands right quick. The extra shiny stockings are the only thing bringing me down here. Quite a fish out of water statement at something like TIFF.

On day 4 we got a royal repeat of her Jubilee outfit – and a regimental brooch, as she was presenting new colors to the Lincoln and Welland Regiment – but then she was all colored out, I guess, because it was back to beige the next day for more Ontario engagements. This one reminds me very much of Kate’s beige Malene Birger dress from one of her Canada stops last year; serviceable and princess-y, but nothing to write home about.

Sophie and Edward's trip ends today. What's your favorite outfit from Sophie on this trip to the Canadian wonderland?

Photos: Governor General/Ottawa Citizen/Nunatsiaq News/BulletNews/Facebook

10 September 2012

Royal Fashion Awards: The London 2012 Paralympics

While I was away, the Paralympics were on. It's the super cute royal Olympics replay, complete with team spirit and cute mini royals. A few of my award-worthy royal Paralympic moments:

Best in Opening Ceremony
Princess Anne
Top row, left to right: Queen Elizabeth, the Earl and Countess of Wessex, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, the Princess Royal (with a glimpse of Princess Alexandra of Kent and the Duchess of Gloucester). Bottom row: the Princess and Prince of Monaco, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, Princess Astrid of Belgium and her husband Archduke Lorenz
Let’s just be honest here: sartorially, the opening ceremony was a total snoozefest. The outfits were as un-pumped as some of these facial expressions. The closest things to fabulous on display were the Queen’s sassy colored earplugs. So let’s give this one to Princess Anne, if only because she’s the only one that brought interest of any sort. Exhibit A: she’s wearing what might as well be a smock, as though she’d just dashed in from her Underwater Pottery 101 class. Exhibit B: she greeted the British team with a merry wave of her official scarf, which is as close to adorable as this princess gets. Exhibit C: she continued to wear her sunglasses at night. She saw she was seated next to Boris Johnson and came prepared for discreet eye rolling, because she’s classy like that.

Best Duo
The Duchess of Cambridge and Lady Louise
More of these two together, please. That is all.

Most Enthusiastic Cheerleader
Prince Harry
L to R: Infanta Elena of Spain and her two children, Prince Harry, the Countess of Wessex, the Duchess of Cambridge
Of the many royals spotted cheering on the athletes, a few stuck out for sheer enthusiasm. There was Sophie, for the doohhhhhh factor, and Kate, for the whooooo factor - as always. Elena and her kids get a mention for gamely sporting the...uh...festive Spain kit. But this one goes to Harry, for getting back out there and reminding us all that if your Vegas trip didn't include at least one thing you feel a little sheepish about, you did it wrong.

Best in Medal Presenters
Princess Michael and Princess Eugenie
Top row, L to R: the Countess of Wessex, Prince Daniel of Sweden, the Duchess of Cambridge, the Earl of Wessex. Bottom row: Prince Michael and Princess Michael of Kent, Princess Eugenie of York, Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark
Loads of royals got to get in on the medal and bouquet bestowing fun this time around, and they mostly looked like they were working the beverage cart for Paralympic Airlines.That's why I have to give this jointly to Princesses Michael and Eugenie, simply for bucking the high flying trend. (And if they are playing flight attendant, sign me up for those journeys. Marie Christine's obviously going somewhere beachy, and Eug's flight clearly serves adult beverages. Strong ones.) (And for the record, even though I know that dress is more than many of you can swallow, I dig it. Eugenie's young, she should be taking some fashion risks, and this Peter Pilotto qualifies.)

Best in Closing Ceremony
The Earl of Wessex
The Earl of Wessex and Sir Philip Craven
The Earl of Wessex, Patron of the British Paralympic Association, really stepped it up throughout the Games. I mean, it takes a lot of gumption to rock the tartan cummerbund. But his entrance at the Closing Ceremony takes the cake. With a ride like that, there's not even any competition.

What was your favorite royal Paralympic moment?

Photos: Getty Images/AP/London 2012