Times Colonist

The dress, appraised: Strong, clean and classic

- SYLVIA HUI and RAPHAEL SATTER

LONDON — Clare Waight Keller of Givenchy is the master British designer behind the sleek silk boat-necked gown and long billowing veil worn by Meghan Markle as she walked down the nave of St. George’s Chapel for her wedding to Prince Harry.

The clean lines of the white dress highlighte­d Markle’s smiling face Saturday as she sat at the altar of the chapel, holding Harry’s hand as the sprawling train lay at her feet.

“It’s brave to not have decoration­s and embellishm­ents. What a strong fashion statement. It’s modern and classic at the same time,” Phillipa Lepley, a leading London bridal designer, told the Associated Press. “The overall look is very ’50s and gorgeous!”

Waight Keller, the first female artistic director of French fashion house Givenchy, met Markle this year, Kensington Palace said. The statement said Markle wanted a dress with an “elegant esthetic, impeccable tailoring, and relaxed demeanour.”

The dress featured no lace or embroidery, carrying a classic boat neckline, three-quarter length sleeves and an A-line skirt with a train measuring about 70 inches from the waist. Markle complement­ed it with a tiara, an embroidere­d cathedral length veil, a bracelet and a small diamond stud earrings.

“The dress is simply beautiful in its classic simplicity,” said Caroline Burstein, owner of Browns Bride, a top London bridal boutique. She called it “a nod to Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn and every iconic wedding we have witnessed throughout the 20th and 21st century. It’s perfect for her and for the occasion they are celebratin­g.”

The veil carried floral references to all 53 countries in the Commonweal­th, the group of countries that roughly correspond­s to the former British Empire and is headed by the Queen, Markle’s new grandmothe­r-in-law.

The palace said workers spent hundreds of hours sewing the delicate flower designs into the veil, meticulous­ly washing their hands every half hour to keep the silk tulle and threads clean. The palace said, in addition to the Commonweal­th flowers, Markle also selected two other plants: Winterswee­t and, in a nod to her birthplace, the California poppy.

“There are no seams in the bodice,” Lepley noted. “Incredibly clean and plain dresses such as this are very time consuming and complicate­d to make, because unlike a lace dress, there is no room for any errors. You can’t hide any wrinkles, as the fabric has to sit perfectly.”

Markle’s tiara was a diamond bandeau made for Queen Mary and specifical­ly designed to accommodat­e the central brooch, given as a gift to the then-Princess Mary in the late 19th century and passed on to the Queen in 1953.

 ??  ?? Meghan Markle and her bridal party arrive for the wedding ceremony at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle on Saturday.
Meghan Markle and her bridal party arrive for the wedding ceremony at St. George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle on Saturday.

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