Monday, August 1, 2011

Zara's something borrowed great-grandmother's tiara

Romantic: Veil and tiara complement Zara's sleek blonde hair
 The Queen never wore the tiara in public and it was next seen on Princess Anne, who was given the tiara by her mother in 1972.
The Princess Royal, now 61 and famous for recycling her outfits for high-profile occasions, wore the tiara during her engagement to her first husband, Zara's father Captain Mark Phillips, and has been pictured sporting it at least four times, notably in 2000 for an official portrait to mark her 50th birthday.
The Princess Royal, now 61 and famous for recycling her outfits for high-profile occasions, wore the tiara during her engagement to her first husband, Zara's father Captain Mark Phillips, and has been pictured sporting it at least four times, notably in 2000 for an official portrait to mark her 50th birthday.
 The Princess Royal, now 61 and famous for recycling her outfits for high-profile occasions, wore the tiara during her engagement to her first husband, Zara's father Captain Mark Phillips, and has been pictured sporting it at least four times, notably in
2000 for an official portrait to mark her 50th birthday.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/07/31/article-2020770-0D3DF71800000578-619_196x330.jpg
The Meander Tiara was given to Zara Phillips to wear on her wedding day today
 Zara Phillips, granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth II
Zara kept up the wedding tradition of having something borrowed by earing a spectacular diamond tiara that has been passed down through four generations of the Royal Family - and was last worn by her mother two months ago.
The bride's short silk veil was set off by the Meander tiara, once owned by Prince Philip's mother and loaned to Zara by Princess Anne, who wore it in May for a state banquet at Buckingham Palace to welcome President Obama and his wife Michele.
The tiara is based around a classical Greek 'key pattern' design and boasts a magnificent cut diamond at its centre, which is set off by a laurel wreath pattern picked out in diamonds with honeysuckle motifs on either side.
The silver headpiece made its way into the Windsor family in 1947 when it was given as a wedding gift to the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth, from her mother-in-law, Princess Alice of Battenberg.
Its Greek style was inspired by her marriage to Prince Andrew of Greece, the father of the present Duke of Edinburgh.