logo
#

Latest news with #AnnaValentine

Queen Camilla's show-stopping Ascot look proves every wardrobe needs a white summer dress and matching bag - here's where to shop the trend
Queen Camilla's show-stopping Ascot look proves every wardrobe needs a white summer dress and matching bag - here's where to shop the trend

Daily Mail​

time15 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Queen Camilla's show-stopping Ascot look proves every wardrobe needs a white summer dress and matching bag - here's where to shop the trend

Queen Camilla embraced head-to-toe white on the penultimate day of Royal Ascot. With temperatures climbing, white remains the smartest way to stay cool and polished, especially for a formal occasion. Take your cue from Camilla, who opted for a breezy chiffon dress by Anna Valentine. The flattering fit-and-flare silhouette was elevated with delicate floral lace detailing, while subtle panelling added interest without tipping into overly fussy. She finished the look with a wide-brimmed Philip Treacy hat - ideal for sun protection - a Lady Dior bag and classic court shoes. Feeling inspired? Scroll down to shop our edit of white summer dresses - with a hint of lace. And if you're in the mood to splurge, you can get your hands on Camilla's exact designer handbag. Don't say we didn't tempt you. EXACT MATCH: Small Lady Dior My ABCDior Bag Shop the trend Dresses Izabel London Lace Trim Midi Dress £60 Shop French Connection Broderie Anglaise Tiered Dress £42 Shop Hobbs Selset Dress £107.10 Shop Aspiga Nyla Beach Kaftan £140 Shop Rixo Edina Embroidered Dress £280 Shop Asos Design Shirt Dress With Lace Hem £45 Shop Florere Lace Trim Midi Dress £248 Shop Sezane Clarissette Dress £170 Shop

Queen Camilla's Regal White Dress Reigns at Trooping the Colour
Queen Camilla's Regal White Dress Reigns at Trooping the Colour

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Queen Camilla's Regal White Dress Reigns at Trooping the Colour

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." For the 2025 Trooping the Colour—the annual celebration of the monarch's official birthday—Queen Camilla embraced timeless elegance. In honor of this year's festivities, the royal opted for an understated ensemble and donned a white silk crepe midi dress embroidered with silver detailing by Anna Valentine. Of course, if there's one thing you can count on the royals to deliver every time, it's a good headpiece. The look was completed with a custom slanted-brim hat by milliner Philip Treacy. She further accessorized with a white clutch and a pair of beige pointed-toe pumps that subtly broke from the otherwise tonal ensemble. Her ensemble's most sentimental element came in the form of a Grenadier Guards brooch—a design incorporating the Royal Cypher beneath a crown and encircled by a blue garter bearing the Order of the Garter's motto: 'Honi soit qui mal y pense,' or 'Shame on he who thinks ill of it.' While her palette remained restrained, other royal family members decided to lean into color. Notably, Princess Charlotte and Kate Middleton made a striking statement in coordinated mother-daughter aquamarine looks. Camilla arrived at this year's event alongside King Charles in a carriage rather than horseback, a change made for a second year amid his ongoing cancer treatment. The two later joined the rest of the senior members of the royal family on the balcony of Buckingham Palace for the traditional military flypast. Though the sitting monarch's birthday actually falls in November, the summer ceremony has long served as the monarch's official birthday celebration. You Might Also Like 4 Investment-Worthy Skincare Finds From Sephora The 17 Best Retinol Creams Worth Adding to Your Skin Care Routine

Queen Camilla dons sophisticated ensemble as she joins her husband for his official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour
Queen Camilla dons sophisticated ensemble as she joins her husband for his official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour

Daily Mail​

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Queen Camilla dons sophisticated ensemble as she joins her husband for his official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour

Queen Camilla was the image of sophistication as she joined her husband's official birthday celebrations at Trooping the Colour today. The royal, 77, donned a white silk crepe dress with silver embroidery by Anna Valentine with a hat by Philip Treacy as she made her way for today's festivities. She added a Grenadier Guards brooch to complete the ensemble. It was revealed ahead of the event that His Majesty had requested a minute's silence in tribute to the 241 passengers and crew killed when a Boeing 787 Dreamliner bound for Gatwick Airport came down on Thursday in the Indian city of Ahmedabad. A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said Charles requested amendments to the Trooping the Colour programme 'as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy'. Today's celebrations follow reports that the monarch will no longer ride during the Trooping the Colour celebrations due to his ongoing cancer treatment. As a former polo player, and one of the Royal Family 's most accomplished equestrians, the monarch rode for years in the parade - both for his mother's official birthday celebrations and then for his own. But he will not appear on horseback at today's event, and will instead travel in a carriage for the procession from Buckingham Palace to Horse Guards Parade and back, according to The Sunday Times. It is understood that he will not ride at the parade again. Reports say his illness have curtailed the 'monarch in the saddle' tradition that he briefly revived in 2023 - the first time the monarch had appeared on horseback at the event since Queen Elizabeth in 1986. The late Queen rode her trusty mare Burmese until the horse was retired. She then began travelling in a carriage until her final appearance in 2022, where she took the salute from the balcony of Buckingham Palace. The King was admitted to hospital for treatment to an enlarged prostate in January 2024 and shortly after was diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer. It meant that he travelled with Queen Camilla in a carriage at last year's parade to be safer and more comfortable. This came a year after what is now known to be his last appearance on horseback for the celebration, which did not go particularly smoothly for Charles. He was riding Noble, a black mare which appeared unsettled throughout - at one point even breaking into a canter in the Mall. One television commentator described Noble's behaviour as 'if it was going into the starting stalls at Newmarket'. However, while Charles is not expected to ride at the parade again, the Princess Royal will be taking to the saddle, marking the first time she will have ridden in public after being hospitalised following a suspected horse injury last year Anne, 74, plans to ride in the parade this year in her role as gold stick, the colonel of the Blues and Royals, alongside the Prince of Wales as colonel of the Welsh Guards and the Duke of Edinburgh as colonel of the Scots Guards and London Guards. Trooping the Colour is a centuries-old tradition that marks the Sovereign's official birthday. It dates back to the 17th century and is rooted in battlefield custom, when regimental flags, or 'colours,' were trooped in front of soldiers to ensure they could be recognised amid the smoke of combat. Last week a full-dress rehearsal, known as The Colonel's Review, took place serving as the final run-through before the King's official celebration. This year, the honour of trooping the Colour falls to the Coldstream Guards, who will officially present their regimental flag, known as the Colour, to King Charles. Following the Trooping ceremony, all eyes will be on the royal balcony to see who King Charles invites to wave to the crowds. King Charles and Queen Camilla will be front and centre on the balcony to watch the Red Arrows flypast, but it expected a host of senior royals will be alongside them. Prince William, 42, is expected to be joined by the Princess of Wales, 43 and their children, Prince George, 11, Princess Charlotte, 10, and Prince Louis, seven. Princess Anne will feature with her husband, Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence, 70. Prince Edward, 61, - who like Anne will be fresh from his part in the procession - is expected on the balcony with his wife Sophie, the Duchess of Edinburgh, 60 They are likely to be joined by their daughter Lady Louise, 21. Their son James, the Earl of Wessex, 17, did not make an appearance last year and may not attend the ceremony this time around either. The Duke of Kent, 89, will likely also be among the royals on the balcony, with the Duke of Gloucester, 80, and his 78-year-old wife Birgitte, the Duchess. As expected, Prince Harry, 40, and his wife Meghan Markle, 43, are not attending this year's celebrations. Having chosen to walk away from being working royals, they have not been present at Trooping the Colour since 2019. The other notable absentee will be Prince Andrew, 65, who remains exiled from public royal events amid the fallout from his relationship with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein and the claims made by late accuser Virginia Giuffre. Andrew's daughters Princess Beatrice, 36, and Princess Eugenie, 35, are not expected to be there either amid Charles' desire for a slimmed-down monarchy and to keep the focus on working royals. Members of the royal family are expected to watch the flypast - including the RAF Red Arrows and a range of planes and helicopters - from the balcony. In previous years it has been a moment where the royal children shine - with little Prince Louis delighting fans last year as pretended to fly one of the planes, appearing to screw up his face as he mimicked the engine's deafening noise. The route for the flypast has not been officially confirmed, but the Military Air Shows has revealed an air restrictions map which shows the expected official route. Proposed restrictions are in the vicinity of the North Sea, East Anglia, Essex and London. Its expected the flypast will go over Buckingham Palace at 1pm. Held traditionally on the second Saturday in June, regardless of the Sovereign's actual date of birth, the celebrations have marked the monarch's official birthday since the mid-1700s. Queen Elizabeth attended all but two of her Trooping the Colours, missing it in 1955 when a national rail strike resulted in the event being cancelled and in 2020 due to lockdown restrictions. The parade is open to members of the public through an online ballot with ticketing ranging from £10 to £30 and is broadcast live on the BBC. What is Trooping the Colour? The Trooping of the Colour has marked the official birthday of the British Sovereign for more than 260 years. Over 1400 parading soldiers, 200 horses and 400 musicians come together each June in a great display of military precision, horsemanship and fanfare to mark the Sovereign's official birthday. The streets are lined with crowds waving flags as the parade moves from Buckingham Palace and down The Mall to Horse Guard's Parade, alongside Members of the Royal Family on horseback and in carriages. The display closes with an RAF fly-past, watched by Members of the Royal Family from Buckingham Palace balcony. Once the Sovereign has arrived at Horse Guard's Parade in Whitehall, they are greeted by a Royal salute and carry out an inspection of the troops, who are fully trained and operational soldiers wearing the ceremonial uniform of red tunics and bearskin hats. After the military bands have performed, the escorted Regimental Colour, or flag, is processed down the ranks of soldiers. Over one hundred words of command are used by the Officer in Command of the Parade to direct the several hundred soldiers. Once the Foot Guards have marched past the Sovereign, they ride back to Buckingham Palace at the head of the soldiers, before taking the salute again at the Palace from a dais. The Sovereign is then joined by other Members of the Royal Family on the balcony at Buckingham Palace to watch a fly-past by the Royal Air Force. A 41-gun salute is also fired in Green Park to mark the occasion. Source: Queen Camilla's glamorous outing comes after a busy week, which saw her in high spirits while making a surprise appearance at a book event in central London on Wednesday. The royal dropped in at the event's open-air venue in Bloomsbury, central London, to congratulate finalists for the Women's Prize for Fiction and Non-fiction and hail the founders of the award for having 'brought the female voice from the margins of the literary world to its very centre'. The avid reader was snapped basking in London's 23-degree weather while conversing with those who were invited to the occasion, as they posed for pictures together in a picturesque garden. Founder and author Kate Mosse, who invited Her Majesty to attend the anniversary event, said her presence had been kept secret. 'Nobody knew, which is why people were so surprised. If you're going to lay on the Queen, if it's not Beyoncé, it's got to be the actual Queen.' The King, 76, was admitted to hospital for treatment to an enlarged prostate in January 2024 and shortly after was diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer. It meant that he travelled with Queen Camilla in a carriage at last year's parade to be safer and more comfortable She added: 'You can tell when someone has read your book genuinely and when they've been given a briefing sheet. And she's a reader, a genuine reader, and someone who genuinely champions women.' Camilla looked regal as she stepped out in the eye-catching Grace dress made with Liberty Green Peacock Manor Silk from Bombshell London. The frock has a green peacock pattern with long sleeves and a collared neckline, along with a belted waist to show off her slim frame. It retails for £599 and is described as being 'inspired by Grace Kelly and Dior dresses of the 1950s'. The mother-of-two paired her ensemble with suede indigo-coloured heels and accessorised with gold jewellery, sporting her glitzy £4,500 Van Cleef & Arpels 18 carat gold bracelet featuring the famous blue clover motifs and vibrant turquoise earrings. The queen wore her signature platinum blonde tresses down in a wavy blow-dry and opted for natural makeup with a hint of pink lipstick. In the Green Room area, she was introduced to the six authors shortlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction, including Nussaibah Younis, whose novel Fundamentally tells the story of an academic who travels to Iraq to deradicalise a teenage Islamic State recruit. She joked that the competition was stiff between finalists, telling Camilla, 'We are trying to take each other out. The Champagne glasses are spiked – there could be one less standing by this afternoon!' The Queen recognised Yael van der Wouden, author of The Safekeep, telling her: 'We met at the Booker [Prize]. Good to see you again.' And turning to Tell Me Everything writer Elizabeth Strout, she said: 'I have read your books, they are lovely.' 'Good luck to you all,' she told the group. 'I shall be thinking of you.' Her Majesty was then introduced to the six shortlisted authors for the Women's Prize for Non-Fiction, which include Neneh Cherry, Rachel Clarke, Chloe Dalton, Clare Mulley, Helen Scales and Yuan Yang. The Women's Prize for Non-Fiction is held annually and is open to all female writers from around the world who are published in the UK and are writing in English. Each winner receives a cheque for £30,000 and a piece of limited-edition artwork known as the 'Charlotte', both gifted by the Charlotte Aitken Trust. The shortlist consists of six books described as being united 'by the power of hope and the necessity of resistance to initiate change'. Camilla including singer-songwriter and rapper Neneh Cherry, whose debut book, A Thousand Threads tells the story of her career. 'I wrote a memoir, a book about my life,' she told Camilla. 'It took more than four years to write it and I'm still slightly recovering. It's out there now, I have let it go, it's out in the world.' The Queen told Claire Mulley, whose Agent Zo tells the story of the Polish wartime resistance fighter Elzbieta Zawakca, 'I think I will put that on my holiday reading list.' And she delighted author Chloe Dalton by telling her she had read her memoir Raising Hare about swapping the rat race for a rural life. 'Thank you so much, I am honoured,' she replied. The Queen was then reunited with Girl, Woman, Other author Bernardine Evaristo, winner of The Women's Prize Outstanding Contribution Award – a special one-off award for the 30th anniversary year. There was a quick stop off in a pop-up Waterstones tent, where authors had been signing their books and Camilla was told the bar was kept open late for those queuing to meet their favourite writers. 'Quite right,' she agreed. On a visit to an audio stand playing a recording of readers' favourite literary quotes, she chatted to Aurelie de Troyer, Audible's head of regional content for Europe, about audiobooks. 'The nice thing about it is that you can take it with you wherever you go,' said Camilla. Making a speech in the Woolf tent in Bedford Square, Her Majesty said the launch of the women's only prize in 1995 had 'brought the female voice from the margins of the literary world to its very centre.' Camilla is highly passionate about promoting literacy in the UK and internationally, with a focus on encouraging children to read from a young age And she hailed it for having 'transformed the literary landscape for women.' She said: 'Three decades later, your achievements are impressive. Budding authors have benefitted from the wisdom of those who have trodden the same path. 'Careers have been launched, bestsellers have flown off the shelves into the hands and hearts of the public, and each year you distribute 3,000 books to people in need. And you have forged a community of 16 million readers who love, in your own words, 'original, accessible and brilliant' literature. 'In short, you have transformed the literary landscape for women. If I might return to Virginia Woolf – who never won any kind of award for her work, but who did have this tent named after her – and misquote her, 'A woman must have a prize of her own if she is to write fiction.

Queen Camilla just embraced this season's must-have hue in understated powder pink outfit - and it's perfect for summer weddings
Queen Camilla just embraced this season's must-have hue in understated powder pink outfit - and it's perfect for summer weddings

Daily Mail​

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Queen Camilla just embraced this season's must-have hue in understated powder pink outfit - and it's perfect for summer weddings

King Charles and Queen Camilla have arrived in Ottawa, Canada, for a two-day visit. Stepping off the plane in style, Camilla embraced current trends in a pastel pink coat dress by Anna Valentine, debuted at the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's wedding, paired with Chanel shoes. While summer 2023 was dominated by bold Barbie pink, this season the fashion world has turned towards a more refined take: powder pink. This softer, more understated hue has been seen across the runways at Fashion Weeks, featured by designers such as Simone Rocha, Alaïa, Erdem and Miu Miu. Romantic yet sophisticated, powder pink is perfect for weddings, garden parties and other special occasions. Browse our selection of event-ready dresses and coats inspired by Camilla's elegant look, including options from River Island, Karen Millen, Nobody's Child and Hobbs.

Queen Camilla leans into this summer's chicest colour trend with the perfect coat for spring - and we've found it on the high street
Queen Camilla leans into this summer's chicest colour trend with the perfect coat for spring - and we've found it on the high street

Daily Mail​

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Queen Camilla leans into this summer's chicest colour trend with the perfect coat for spring - and we've found it on the high street

Pale blue is dominating runways and wardrobes, particularly for spring and summer 2025. On a visit to Bradford, the City of Culture, Queen Camilla looked typically elegant in an ice blue dress paired with a pale blue coat by Anna Valentine. She accessorised with two diamond dragonfly brooches from her own collection. Camilla leans into soft hues and light spring pastels to embody the natural elegance she carries in her everyday life. Looking for the perfect summer jacket to add to your own wardrobe? Discover our top picks below. & Other Stories Oversized Wool Coat £195 Shop Calvin Klein Relaxed Wool Wrap Coat £180 Shop Long Tall Sally Blue Trench Coat £74 Shop Izabel London Light Blue Wrap Front Tie Waist Coat £49 Shop Amazon Fashion Long-Sleeved Wool Coat £17.70 Shop Phase Eight Cheryl Trench Coat £189 Shop Sosandar Blue Formal Coat £95 Shop Weekend Max Mara Double-breasted double-faced wool coat £605 Shop Marella wool coat £550 Shop Joseph Wool-Cashmere Costa Coat £1,175 Shop

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store