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Markle’s Choice: Will a Royal Tiara Grace the Big Day?


Diamond tiaras are on display at Bradley & Skinner, an antique and period jewelry specialist, in London, April 5, 2018. Meghan Markle will have access to one of the world’s most remarkable jewelry collections for her wedding to Prince Harry. London jewelers are hoping Markle will bring tiaras back in fashion when she walks down the aisle May 19.
Diamond tiaras are on display at Bradley & Skinner, an antique and period jewelry specialist, in London, April 5, 2018. Meghan Markle will have access to one of the world’s most remarkable jewelry collections for her wedding to Prince Harry. London jewelers are hoping Markle will bring tiaras back in fashion when she walks down the aisle May 19.

Meghan Markle hasn’t said if she will wear a tiara at her upcoming royal wedding, but if she does she’ll be able to choose from one of the world’s most remarkable jewelry collections.

That’s because Queen Elizabeth II, the grandmother of husband-to-be Prince Harry, has hundreds of tiaras squirreled away in locked vaults, and royal tradition holds that the queen will let Markle borrow one of these sparkly heirlooms.

There’s no shortage of diamonds in the queen’s collection, to say nothing of rubies, sapphires and emeralds. One tiara is designed so that its emeralds can be replaced by pearls, depending on the rest of the outfit, of course.

FILE - Britain's Prince Harry and Meghan Markle watch a dance performance by Jukebox Collective Cardiff Castle in Cardiff, Wales, Jan. 18, 2018.
FILE - Britain's Prince Harry and Meghan Markle watch a dance performance by Jukebox Collective Cardiff Castle in Cardiff, Wales, Jan. 18, 2018.

Skip the tiara?

The bride’s actual choice probably won’t be known until May 19 when she walks down the aisle of St. George’s Chapel to marry Harry and officially join the royal family. But some of London’s most exclusive jewelers are devoutly hoping she won’t turn her back on tiaras in favor of a more egalitarian look.

Markle, a 36-year-old American actress, is known for her contemporary fashion sense and could surprise everyone by skipping the tiara in favor of a less stately, more accessible look. But Omar Vaja, sales director at the renowned Bentley & Skinner jewelry shop in London, thinks she will follow tradition.

“Her style of dress is quite modern and casual,” Vaja said. “So she’ll probably go for something that’s small and modest. There’s quite a lot to choose from. I think we’re talking about hundreds of tiaras.”

He says tiaras often have been kept in aristocratic families for generations, passed down to wear on special occasions.

Vaja and other jewelers in London’s tony Mayfair district have a vested interest in seeing Markle carry forward the tiara tradition. He expects this royal wedding, like earlier ones, to spur interest in tiaras and other vintage treasures that his shop is known for.

In need of a boost

Tiaras were the height of fashion in the 1920s and 1930s, when affluent British women would often wear them to royal galas or fancy banquets, but British society changed drastically after the destruction wrought by World War II.

The grand court life that preceded it was never fully revived, said Christopher St. James, who designed many of the tiaras worn by the fictional Grantham family in the popular Downton Abbey TV series.

“Elizabeth II stopped doing the great big court balls where debutantes would come and be presented to the queen and they had to wear a tiara and their mothers would wear a tiara,” he said. “That was all gone after the war.”

The ’50s in Britain was a time of rationing and scarcity, not the best time for opulent displays of jewelry worth more than a small house.

The Beatles’ John Lennon even mocked the tradition of wearing expensive jewelry and tiaras to gala events during a royal command performance at the London Palladium in 1963. He told the people in the cheap seats they could clap their hands the usual way and urged everyone in the fancy seats to just rattle their jewelry instead.

The Queen Mother, wearing a rather splendid tiara, took the gibe with a smile, but the point was made. Royal-style accessories like diamond-encrusted tiaras fell out of favor in the swinging Sixties.

Diana's tiara

Harry’s mother, Princess Diana, helped revive the tiara glamour. Reflecting her own aristocratic roots, she wore her family’s tiara, known as the Spencer tiara, as she came from the Spencer clan, when she married Prince Charles in 1981.

Some believe Markle may choose to conspicuously pay tribute to Diana by wearing the Spencer tiara, which has a fanciful design of flowers decorated with diamonds in silver settings. On the day their engagement was announced, she and Harry spoke about their shared desire to invoke Diana’s memory at the wedding.

There are plenty of other royal tiaras to consider as well, depending on what the queen decides to make available.

The Cartier "Halo" tiara, worn by the Duchess of Cambridge on her wedding day, is seen in Buckingham Palace in London, July 20, 2011, before it goes on display during the palace's annual summer opening.
The Cartier "Halo" tiara, worn by the Duchess of Cambridge on her wedding day, is seen in Buckingham Palace in London, July 20, 2011, before it goes on display during the palace's annual summer opening.

One tiara Markle is not likely to wear is the famed Cartier Halo Tiara, a diamond-and-platinum masterpiece worn by her soon-to-be sister-in-law, Kate Middleton (now the Duchess of Cambridge) when she married Prince William in 2011.

The final choice will also be influenced by Markle’s wedding gown and chosen hairstyle.

“It has to be something that will read on camera because it will be read by millions,” said St. James, the designer. “People want to see sparkle, not some tiny little headband you can barely see.”

“I’m sure she will have something really nice, maybe something we’ve never seen before!” he added.

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