Princess Diana's wedding dress going on display at Kensington Palace
The dress that Diana, Princess of Wales, wore on her wedding day 40 years ago is going on display at her former Kensington Palace home.
The dukes of Cambridge and Sussex have loaned the dress to the exhibition, which begins a month before Diana would have turned 60.
It was designed by David and Elizabeth Emanuel for the July 1981 wedding.
The gown features a 25ft (7.6m) sequin-encrusted train, which filled the aisle of St Paul's Cathedral.
Organisers of the exhibition, Royal Style in the Making, say the dress is "now among the most famous in bridal history".
The dress has a fitted bodice overlaid with panels of antique Carrickmacross lace originally belonging to Queen Mary.
As well as the nod to history, it was very much in keeping with early 1980s fashion with its large puffed sleeves trimmed with bows and deep ruffles of taffeta.
In a video shown at the exhibition, Ms Emanuel remembers Diana phoning to ask her and her then-husband to make her dress.
"It was one of those strange moments where you know your life is never going to be the same again," she said.
As well as their mother's wedding dress, Princes William and Harry have also loaned her going-away dresses to the show.
The exhibition, which looks at designing an outfit for a royal client and also features those who dressed the Queen, Princess Margaret and the Queen Mother, is being held at the Kensington Palace Orangery.
It opens to the public on 3 June and continues on to early January 2022.
It also features a rare surviving toile - an early version of a finished garment - for the 1937 gown worn by Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother for King George VI's coronation.
June 03, 2021 at 07:08AM
By Lauren Turner
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-57338265
Labels: BBC News
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