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Kate Middleton Wedding Jewellery

  • May 2, 2011 at 12:51 pm

As Princess Catherine demonstrated at the Royal Wedding – understated elegance is a vital key when choosing the right wedding accessoriesto compliment your gown. Well chosen, matching items of bridal jewellery will complete your bridal outfit and enhance your whole wedding look.  The newly crowned Duchess of Cambridge chose a stunning, intricately designed diamond tiara as her ‘Something Borrowed’ – on loan from the Queen.  The medium sized, pear drop diamond earrings were a gift from her parents as her ‘Something New’.

Image above  Robinson Pelham

To create a similar look with your bridal jewellery, opt for a pair of dazzling Cubic Zirconia stone earrings which will beautifully emulate the look of real-diamonds. Choosing a regal shaped wedding tiara  – such as this one from  our Collection – and for some matching drop earrings – choose from our Heidi range of diamante jewellery.

Looking for something extra special?  then take a look at the Girls Love Pearls carefully chosen collection of diamond earrings, and diamond pendants, featuring real diamonds in pave settings in 9ct gold.  Prices start from just £150 for our diamond earrings, and with designs which are inspirational of the Duchess of Cambridge’s own jewellery worn on her wedding day.

The added saying – ‘Simplicity is Key’ – is what has made this Royal Wedding look so perfect, and achieving this can be easily done with some shopping around, a keen eye for detail and good taste!

We now have our very own version of the Royal Wedding Earrings and Tiara available on the Girls Love Pearls Website.

Below Heidi Diamante earrings

Below, diamond and gold earring and pendant set.
Featured necklace and pendant set below are pave set diamonds in white 9ct gold finish in an understated vintage style.

Clarence House releases Official Royal Photos of Kate and William

  • April 30, 2011 at 6:20 pm

Here are a few of the  official wedding photographs for the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, now known as The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.  These stunning photographs were taken by Hugo Burnand, depicting a radiant, newly married couple.

 

 

 

The radiant Couple are pictured in The Throne Room with (left-to-right)

Back row: The Lady Louise Mountbatten-Windsor, The Bridegroom, The Bride, Master Tom Pettifer, Master William Lowther-Pinkerton.

Front row: Miss Grace van Cutsem, Miss Eliza Lopes, The Hon. Margarita Armstrong-Jones.

The portrait in the background of the photograph is Richard Colley Wellesley, Marquess Wellesley (1760-1842), c.1832 by Sir Martin Archer Shee (oil on canvas).

Looking for some beautiful wedding jewellery like Kate’s? then take a look at the Girls Love Pearls website, we have our very own diamond earrings for you to choose from, all designed for you to look like a Princess too.

Take a look at these beautiful diamond and pearl earrings. Exquisitely fashioned in a similar style to Kate’s, and with a lustrous pearl as the centre piece.  The diamonds weigh in at  0.10ct in the earrings and 0.063 in the pendant, all set in 9ct gold with a gold chain to match the pendant.    The price of the pendant is only £390.00 and the earrings are £295.00 – affordable diamonds for every bride.

 

Kate’s Wedding Dress by Sarah Burton

  • April 29, 2011 at 2:30 pm
A gorgeous Grace Kelly Styled dress for the future Queen of England.
Catherine Middleton’s ivory and lace wedding dress was designed by Sarah Burton, creative director at the fashion house Alexander McQueen, the palace announced today as she entered Westminster Abbey.
“Miss Middleton wished for her dress to combine tradition and modernity with the artistic vision that characterises Alexander McQueen’s work,” officials announced in a statement.
“Miss Middleton worked closely with Sarah Burton in formulating the design of her dress.”

Miss Middleton chose British brand Alexander McQueen for the beauty of its craftsmanship and its respect for traditional workmanship and the technical construction of clothing.  Miss Middleton wished for her dress to combine tradition and modernity with the artistic vision that characterises Alexander McQueen’s work.

Kate Middleton's Wedding Dress

The dress epitomises timeless British craftsmanship by drawing together talented and skilled workmanship from across the United Kingdom.  The dress design pays tribute to the Arts and Crafts tradition, which advocated truth to materials and traditional craftsmanship using simple forms and often Romantic styles of decoration.  Ms Burton’s design draws on this heritage, additionally giving the cut and the intricate embellishment a distinctive, contemporary and feminine character.

The design

The lace appliqué for the bodice and skirt was hand-made by the Royal School of Needlework, based at Hampton Court Palace.  The lace design was hand-engineered (appliquéd) using the Carrickmacross lace-making technique, which originated in Ireland in the 1820s.  Individual flowers have been hand-cut from lace and hand-engineered onto ivory silk tulle to create a unique and organic design, which incorporates the rose, thistle, daffodil and shamrock.

Hand-cut English lace and French Chantilly lace has been used throughout the bodice and skirt, and has been used for the underskirt trim.  With laces coming from different sources, much care was taken to ensure that each flower was the same colour.  The whole process was overseen and put together by hand by Ms Burton and her team.

The dress is made with ivory and white satin gazar.  The skirt echoes an opening flower, with white satin gazar arches and pleats.  The train measures two metres 70 centimetres.  The ivory satin bodice, which is narrowed at the waist and padded at the hips, draws on the Victorian tradition of corsetry and is a hallmark of Alexander McQueen’s designs.  The back is finished with 58 gazar and organza covered buttons fastened by Rouleau loops.  The underskirt is made of silk tulle trimmed with Cluny lace.

The Fabrics

French Chantilly lace was combined with English Cluny lace to be hand-worked in the Irish Carrickmacross needlework tradition.

All other fabrics used in the creation of the dress were sourced from and supplied by British companies.  The choice of fabrics followed extensive research by Sarah Burton and her team.

 

Kate Middleton's Wedding Dress

The Royal School of Needlework

The Royal School of Needlework (RSN), based at Hampton Court Palace, assisted the Alexander McQueen team in accurately cutting out the delicate motifs from the lace fabrics and positioning the lace motifs with precision into the new design.  The lace motifs were pinned, ‘framed up’ and applied with stab stitching every two to three millimetres around each lace motif.  The workers washed their hands every thirty minutes to keep the lace and threads pristine, and the needles were renewed every three hours, to keep them sharp and clean.

The RSN workers included existing staff, former staff, tutors, graduates and students, with the youngest aged 19.

The RSN’s work was used primarily for the train and skirt of the Bride’s dress, the bodice and sleeves, the Bride’s shoes and the Bride’s veil.

We thought you looked absolutely stunning Kate.

A beautiful pair of diamond drop earrings to match her tiara completed the radiant bride’s look.  For more beautiful wedding jewellery to make you feel like a princess, visit the Girls Love Pearls website.  Coming soon, our own version of Kate’s stunning bridal earrings.

 

Kate’s Wedding Tiara

  • April 29, 2011 at 2:14 pm

The royal wedding jewelry shining from Kate Middleton (now Her Royal Highness Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge) was an understated display of elegance, grace and delicate diamonds.

The Tiara:

The subject of MUCH speculation, Kate ‘borrowed’ the Halo Tiara, made by Cartier in 1936. The Queen’s father, then the Duke of York, bought the bauble for the Queen Mother, then the Duchess of York, who then gave it to her daughter – then Princess Elizabeth – on her 18th birthday.

Set in platinum, the priceless jewel is made from old and baguette-cut diamonds, with the upper part forming a range of lotus flowers and the lower ‘zig-zag’ part forming a removable piece that can be used as a bandeau.

No word yet on whether or not Catherine gets to keep it for her own collection – or if it’s just a loaner. Stay tuned!

For a beautiful tiara to finish off your wedding day look, checkout the Girls Love Pearls collection of designer tiaras, wedding hair accessories, head bands, hair combs, side tiaras and crowns – all made for a princess (ok, but just not in diamonds!)