American 30-something teacher. I have a strange obsession with both royalty and Christian fundamentalism.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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Hi, excuse me, but who let Estelle become grown?


New pictures of Princess Estelle and Prince Oscar have been released to celebrate Swedenâs National Day | June 6, 2025
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This is one of my favorite Maddie looks ever. Everything about it is perfection.




Through the Years â Princess Madeleine of Sweden (228/â) 10 December 2024 | Princess Madeleine of Sweden, Duchess of Hälsingland and Gästrikland attends the Nobel Prize Banquet 2024 at Stockholm City Hall in Stockholm, Sweden. (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)
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Those pearls against Maryâs dark hair are everything.
A Year in Tiaras
2024 - Danish Royal Family

â Danish New Year's Court âłÂ Just like every year, the Danish kicked off the tiara year with their traditional New Year's Court on January 1st. Just the evening before Queen Margrethe announced her abdication (quite out of the blue), so this definitely was a special edition with Daisy wearing a tiara for the last time in her capacity as Queen of the Danes: her beloved Pearl poirĂŠ tiara. The future Queen Mary wore the Danish ruby parure tiara and princess Marie the diamond floral tiara. Princess Benedikte attended too and wore the Berleburg fringe tiara.

â New official pictures âłÂ On April 25th the Danish Royal Court released new official pictures of the new royal couple. Queen Mary was wearing parts of the Danish emerald parure (including the tiara, of course) for the first time. The parure is part of the Danish crown jewels and can be seen in Rosenborg Castle in Copenhagen.

â State visit to Sweden âłÂ On May 6th King Frederik and Queen Mary made a state visit to Sweden. King Carl Gustav and Queen Silvia hosted a state banquet. Queen Mary wore the tiara of the Danish ruby parure. This set has Swedish roots (it came to the Danish royal family through Queen Lovisa, who was a Swedish princess), so it was a very fitting choice.

â State visit to Norway âł Â A week later, on May 15th, King Frederik and Queen Mary arrived in Norway for a second state visit. They were welcomed by King Harald and Queen Sonja of Norway, who hosted a state banquet in the evening. Mary wore the Pearl poirĂŠ tiara for the first time and it looks absolutely gorgeous on her!

â Icelandic state visit to Denmark âł On October 8th, Frederik and Mary hosted their first incoming state visit as King and Queen. The president of Iceland was visiting and of course the Danish royals hosted a state banquet during the evening of the first day. Queen Mary took the Pearl poirĂŠ tiara for another spin. Princess Benedikte attended too, wearing the Berleburg fringe tiara.

â Egyptian state visit to Denmark âł Just before the end of the year, on December 6th, the Danish royals had another incoming state visit scheduled. The president of Egypt visited Denmark. During the state banquet, Queen Mary outed a new tiara: the Danish diamond bandeau. The piece is made of diamonds that are set in a girdle that is part of the Danish crown jewels. The diamonds are now set in a tiara frame now. As an avid lover of the Dutch diamond bandeau, I am very happy to see this new setting: it makes these gorgeous stones wearable again in a modern way!
What can be said about the Danish tiara year? Funnily enough, last year I was rambling that I needed a bold move from Queen Margrethe, because the Danish tiara game was in a rut. And boy, did she deliver! Three tiaras debuts for Mary, including a 'brand' new tiara and we also got a lot of appearances from Benny and even Marie, who lives in the US now. I'm going to do it, because if I don't do it now, it'll probably never happen: I give the Danish tiara year 10/10 on the Bejeweled Scale of Maxie!
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That red Preen dress was perfection. The dress, shoes, makeup, hair was perfect. One of my all time favorite Catherine looks. I will never not love that dress.










The Princess of Wales June 2024 Photo Challenge
Day 10 - Favourite photo(s) of Catherine in 2015 or 2016
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British Royal Family - Queen Elizabeth II, with other royal mums, beams in a never-before-seen family portrait as she cradles her newborn baby. The image is taken by Lord Snowdon in 1964, is one of 150 items set to go on display at Buckingham Palace in a brand-new exhibition. The picture was taken as a gift for the doctor who delivered the children and has never been shown in public until now. | May 16, 2024
Princess Alexandra with her son, James Ogilvy;
Queen Elizabeth II with her son, Prince Edward;
Princess Margaret with her daughter, Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones;
The Duchess of Kent with her daughter, Lady Helen Windsor
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The emeralds are stunning with her dark hair. They really pop. Gorgeous!

TIARA ALERT: Queen Mary of Denmark wore Queen Caroline Amalieâs Emerald Parure Tiara for a new official portrait at Christiansborg Palace on 25 April 2024.
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This election is not about policy. This election is about protecting our democracy. I will happily vote for Biden, even though I disagree with some of his policy decisions (in particular his handling of Palestine and Israel). Biden will protect our democracy, Trump wonât. Full stop.
i ask this in 100% good faith as sometimes who's just read over Trump's 2025 manifesto: what the fuck are we supposed to do
like i know the big call is to not vote for Biden or Trump and trust me I do not want to vote for Joe, but the manifesto is going after the rights of women, pregnant people, every type of person under the LGBTQ umbrella, POC, and in a political climate where Roe v. Wade was overturned i feel like it's completely possible that he'd be able to achieve at least some of that so
is there a 3rd party candidate I don't know about?? or what is the plan here bc tbh as a queer person and someone who was planning to be pregnant in the next year I'm scared as hell like are we really just not voting? It's 7 months out and I feel like no one is agreeing on what to do
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#WhoDey
In honor of the Super Bowl here are two of the most insane Joe Burrow scramblesâŚthat happen to have been against both the 49ers and Chiefs
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Sheâs a democrat. They hate that more than anything. The irony is that sheâs only encouraged people to register to vote. She hasnât been outwardly political since she endorsed Hillary, and that was less endorsing Hillary and more not endorsing Trump.
I donât understand why republicans are h8ng taytay? Sheâs everything theyâd normally love isnât she? Girl next door, sheâs not very political, sheâs pretty, sheâs white, isnât she sort of southern?! Youâd like theyâd luv her. IDGI!!!
Is it bc their football team lost or some other stoopid man reason
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For me it was Carl Philip and Sofiaâs wedding!
You're not a true royal watcher unless you've watched a random live stream of an event that doesn't impact you whatsoever with no clue what anybody is saying
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In London during the late spring of 1953, preparations for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth IIâs Coronation were reaching their denouement.
Couturier Norman Hartnell was completing a dress to outshine any other.
Tucked away at the back of Hartnellâs lavish Mayfair townhouse, a team of embroiderers were finishing stitching a floral garland on the ivory silk bodice and crinoline.
Pastel thread, jewels, sequins, beads and 10,000 seed pearls were sewn as Commonwealth emblems and British flora around an English Tudor rose scattered with diamond dewdrops.
Six young, aristocratic maids of honour, including 19-year-old Lady Anne Coke â best-selling author Anne Glenconner â were being drilled like guardsmen by The Duke of Norfolk, responsible for organising the coronation, as they rehearsed the walk to the Abbey altar, with his wife, the Duchess, standing in for The Queen.
âIf the Bishops donât learn to walk in step,â he remonstrated, âweâll be here all night.â

The photographer Cecil Beaton, well-versed in photographing crowned heads and aristocrats in the Vogue studios, was prepping a vantage point in Westminster Abbey, high up by the organ pipes, as the best location from which to capture the ceremony.
It would be a long day; heâd fill his top hat with sandwiches to sustain him.
Nearby, at Garrard, the Crown Jeweller and his team of master craftsmen were hunched over workbenches altering the Imperial State Crown to fit the young Queenâs head.
Garrard had made the Crown in 1937 for King George VI â a replica of the crown designed and crafted for Queen Victoria, which contained virtually all the same stones symbolic of centuries of Royal history, fitted around a purple velvet cap and ermine band.

Clusters of diamond-set crosses and fleurs-de-lis linked by swags of diamonds, supported by sapphires, emeralds and pearls in the form of oak leaves and acorns, dazzled around the massive 317.40 carat Cullinan II diamond, the Second Star of Africa, cut from the largest diamond ever discovered.
Above it sat the Black Princeâs Ruby â in fact, a spinel, worn by Henry V at Agincourt â while the 104 carat oval Stuart sapphire gleamed at the rear of the band, with the cross atop the orb set with the sapphire from Edward the Confessorâs ring.
King George VI requested Garrard create an inner âhammockâ style fitting, like a guardâs officerâs bearskin, to distribute the nearly three pounds of weight evenly on his head.
Reshaping the circlet for Queen Elizabeth II involved remounting the stones and motifs of which it is composed, as well as repositioning and lowering the arches, all of which required craftsmanship of the highest skill.
The aim was to improve the strength of the crown with lightness of weight, which isnât easy with large stones, and those which were cut nearly 300 years ago.
They were working against the clock. The new Queen required time before the ceremony to become accustomed to the crownâs feel and weight.
âThere are some disadvantages to crowns, but otherwise they are very important things,â said Her Majesty, recalling its heaviness on the 65th anniversary of the coronation.
âFortunately, my father and I have roughly the same shaped head, so once you put it on, it stays.â
The media demanded constant updates on Garrardâs work, with the coronation making broadcasting history as the first service to be televised, adding to the sense of pressure.
In addition, two gold Armill bracelets of sincerity and wisdom, symbolic of the monarchâs bond with the people needed to be finished, which were replacing the 17th-century enamel bracelets dating from the coronation of King Charles II.
In previous ceremonies, the Armills had been carried, but these were made for the Queen to wear, decorated with two rows of engraving and Tudor rose clasps with red velvet linings.
Garrard was also inundated with cleaning requests.
âNo one had worn their jewellery or tiaras during the war,â explains Lady Anne.
âPeople were queuing to have their tiaras, which were like great fenders of diamonds, stomachers and necklaces cleaned.â

On the day, 2 June 1953, it poured with rain.
Lady Anne remembers arriving at the Abbey:
âIt was pretty dark and cold. Our dresses werenât lined, there were clothing coupons after the war you see.
A tiny thread of blue cotton had been placed on the floor in the Abbey, so the Queen knew where to stand.
When the procession began, we walked past row upon row of tiaras, as well as people in their National dress.
The Queen walked a bit faster than the Duchess had in rehearsals, so we had to adjust our steps.â
The ceremony ended at 2 oâclock in the afternoon.
Hartnell left after watching his historic dress sweep down the aisle followed by the procession of royal pages, maids of honour, peers and peeresses sparkling with diamonds, looking, he remarked:
âLike a lovely hunk of fruitcake, the damson jam of velvet bordered with clotted cream of ermine and sprinkled with the sugar of diamonds.â



Beaton rushed to Buckingham Palace to photograph the Queen theatrically against a painted backdrop, holding the orb and sceptre and wearing the Imperial State Crown.
The Crown Jeweller Garrard remained until The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh had taken lunch in the Abbey annex, in case any last-minute adjustments to the diamond-encrusted Crown were needed.
âCecil was waiting when we all returned from the Abbey,â Lady Anne continues.
âHe had everything set up for the photographs, and thatâs when I really noticed the Crown and jewels glittering under the bright lights and took note of it all.
The Queen looked so young, beautiful and vulnerable, so the contrast of seeing her crowned with all the regalia was extraordinary.
She was weighted down a bit, but I remember thinking it was terribly poignant.â
A tense moment followed.
âThe Duke of Edinburgh was fussing around, and Cecil got irritated, put his camera down and said, âOh Sir, would you prefer to take the photographs?ââ Lady Anne laughs.
âThe Queen looked a bit horrified, and The Duke wandered off. You see, The Duke would have liked the photographer Baron, but it was The Queen Mother who adored Cecil.â

Later, it was still rainy and dark outside.
When the gleaming, crowned figure of The Queen appeared on the Buckingham Palace balcony, she shone with a sense of tradition and permanence.
With the Imperial State Crown, she wore the Coronation necklace and earrings, made in 1858 by Garrard and worn by Queen Alexandra and Queen Mary, including 25 brilliants suspending the Lahore diamond drop.
Time will tell if the Armills will return to being carried at the Coronation of HRH The Prince of Wales, and if he has inherited the Windsor head shape, but should substantial adjustments be required, the crown will appear once more unchanged.
The historical continuity of the regalia, and the fact the crown is still in constant use, makes these jewels created in the Garrard workshop the most potent in the world.

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Beautiful! It looks like a store showroom. Itâs stunning.



All set for our family Christmas Eve Eve dinner đ
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There is an American comic book character named Katy Keene. Thats probably what heâs referring to.
Hi BB, don' judge me too harshly but I love a royal weekly discussion programme that I don't have to pay for. One I watch is the mail's palace confidential. Richard Eden is on most weeks and he had a theory as to where Kate's new scobie book nickname came from. Meghan had mentioned in an article that she had loved some American cartoon as a child and she identified with the heroine. I can't remember the baddie's name but the second word was keen. He was only delighted with himself solving, in his eyes, the origin of Katie keen. He never has a good word to say about meg and h. Becca, in fairness is more measured.
That Richard dude is such an ass! Have u listened to @claireofluxembourg radio show, u should!
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Catherine or Louis?

Sharing some festive memories this Christmas because #ShapingUs is all about the vital importance of our early years and the role played by those around us in shaping the rest of our lives.
đ¸ of The Princess, Christmas 1983
Donât miss the Together at Christmas Carol Service with @.earlychildhood this Christmas Eve at 7:45pm on @ITV.
via The Prince and Princess of Wales
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Itâs giving cowboy Barbie



The Crown of the Swedish Heir / The Crown Princess' Crown
King Karl X Gustav's Crown of the Heir Apparent with its blue cap is the crown of Crown Princess Victoria. It was made in 1650 by Jurgen Dargeman in gold and set with pearls, diamonds, sapphires, and rubies.
The crown was made quickly for Queen Kristina's coronation in 1650. Only 17 days before the coronation, the Queen reminded the council that, according to tradition, the heir to the throne wore a unique costume consisting of a cloak, a crown and a cap. JĂźrgen Dargeman had just over a week to make a new crown for Karl (X) Gustav.
Because time was so short, Dargeman reused the crown created for Queen Kristina the Elder to wear for King Karl IX's coronation. He applied enamel decorations from the old crown and newly mounted stones to a freshly made plain crown ring with eight triangular points.
At the coronation, the crown is not worn directly on the head â instead, it is placed over a velvet hat, embroidered in gold and silver and edged with ermine.
The Crown of Sweden's Heir Apparent remains virtually unchanged to this day. The only alteration of any significance was carried out for the coronation of King Gustav III in 1772 when two of the lower sceptres were replaced with black enamelled corn sheaves, the symbol of the great Vasa dynasty.
King Gustaf V was the last to wear the crown (sans velvet hat), and it can now be seen at the Treasury at the Royal Palace of Stockholm, and the hat can be seen at the Royal Armoury.
Photos: The Royal Court of Sweden
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Itâs like a cowâs opinion.
You know what titles I want of Charles to strip from Harry? It's the princely and HRH he can have that tainted duchy title all he wants.
That one is even more complicated to remove but, well, Charles won't do anything and neither the parliament so, as Joey would say, this is a Moo point.
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