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Inside the first 100 days of Meghan’s royal style

A look at Meghan Markle’s fashion choices — some controvers­ial, others well-loved — over the 100 days that she’s been the Duchess of Sussex

- By Jess Cartner-Morley

The gooey-eyed, loved-up, you-cando-no-wrong stage of the honeymoon between the new Duchess of Sussex and the media lasted for three weeks precisely. On June 9, for her first appearance on the Buckingham Palace balcony after the trooping the colour celebratio­ns, the royal formerly known as Meghan Markle wore a pale-pink Carolina Herrera dress with a wide, off-the-shoulder collar. “Some were quick to notice that she may have bent one of British royalty’s most steadfast rules,” observed Hello! magazine gravely, noting that “royal protocol usually advises that women should keep their shoulders covered”.

A few weeks later, at Wimbledon’s women’s singles final, the big news from the royal box was the daring return of the duchess’ signature “messy bun”. “Meghan Markle has been sticking to the royals’ elegant style lately... but this weekend her messy hairstyle and casual look were back,” noted Vanity Fair. As if strands of untucked hair were not enough to see the duchess branded the biggest royal rulebreake­r since the Duchess of Devonshire scandalise­d 18th-century society with her affairs and gambling debts, it transpired that at one event she had momentaril­y forgotten the “duchess slant” and crossed her legs at the knee, rather than the ankle. The Daily Mail expressed concern that she would be “slammed for disrespect­ing the Queen”, quoting a “royal etiquette expert” who pronounced crossing the leg at the knee one of the “biggest etiquette mistakes a lady can make”.

It’s been a little over 100 days since she became a duchess and the “breaking royal protocol” narrative has emerged as the plot twist that makes her fairytale a modern one. It is a tagline that has almost nothing to do with her relationsh­ip with the royal family and everything to do with her relationsh­ip with the public.

The first “scandal” of the duchess’s married life came when, at her father-in-law’s birthday party, she was photograph­ed in sheer tights. It was reported that the tights were by order of the Queen, but I find it hard to believe the Queen is so petty as to issue hosiery edicts . It seems more likely that the tights were simply an attempt at looking formal that backfired in the face of flash photograph­y. Nonetheles­s, little else seemed to be discussed on social media for days. To brandish a pair of unphotogen­ic tights as proof that a 36-year-old woman who had weathered a pre-wedding familial firestorm and maintained grace and dignity in front of a wedding audience of millions had surrendere­d free will and submitted to Gilead-esque rules within days seems to stretch the significan­ce of hosiery.

The duchess’s image as a rule breaker is catnip because it cuts both ways. It energises those who disapprove of her and those who cheer her. Even when the breaking of royal protocol is used as ad-

It’s been a little over 100 days since she became a duchess and the ‘breaking royal protocol’ narrative has emerged as the plot twist that makes her fairytale a modern one.

With the Duchess of Sussex, our interest is in how exciting and refreshing she is as a royal, so the focus on her wardrobe zeroes in on how formal or informal it is.

monishment, many among the public see it as her greatest asset. As the first biracial woman to marry into the royal family, the first to have had a successful career, the first self-proclaimed feminist and the first divorcee, she is a revolution­ary force in Britain just by being herself.

The discussion of her clothes is never really about clothes. When Kate Middleton married Prince William seven years ago, the interest in her wardrobe settled on the price tags. The forensic examinatio­n of how much she had paid for her LK Bennett shoes and Reiss jackets was a thinly veiled vehicle for the sneery obsession with her having come from a family that was not quite posh enough. With the Duchess of Sussex, our interest is in how exciting and refreshing she is as a royal, so the focus on her wardrobe zeroes in on how formal or informal it is.

As a rule, the British public likes its royal women to be as glamorous as possible, but around the duchess there is a new appetite for deshabille.

Her outfit for Wimbledon — the messy bun, along with a striped, blue-and-white Ralph Lauren shirt and cream palazzo pants — was her best-received outfit since the wedding. A sharp but understate­d black Givenchy trousersui­t, worn on July 11 during an official visit to Dublin, was also loved by fashion critics. By contrast, the voluminous blue-and-white toile de jouy Oscar de la Renta maxi dress she wore to the wedding of her husband’s cousin Celia McCorquoda­le — by far her most daring, fashion-forward choice of the past 100 days — got a cold reception. No one wants fashion-forward from the duchess, it seems.

She has developed a signature look that appeals to as broad a church as possible. The most distinctiv­e feature is the wide, bateau neckline that featured on her Givenchy wedding dress.

The new royal is compelling to watch because the balancing act she must pull off is almost impossible. The Duchess of Sussex is expected to show us the way towards the royal family of the future, but without showing disrespect for the royal family of today.

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 ?? Rex Features ??
Rex Features
 ??  ?? Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry in July. She is wearing Dior Haute Couture. Markle wearing a denim Carolina Herrera dress.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry in July. She is wearing Dior Haute Couture. Markle wearing a denim Carolina Herrera dress.
 ??  ?? In Givenchy. In a casual Altuzarra dress. Wearing a sunny Brandon Maxwell dress. In a taupe Roland Mouret dress. In a Givenchy blazer and trousers.
In Givenchy. In a casual Altuzarra dress. Wearing a sunny Brandon Maxwell dress. In a taupe Roland Mouret dress. In a Givenchy blazer and trousers.
 ??  ?? Wearing a blush pink Nonie trenchcoat. In a dark green Givenchy ensemble.
Wearing a blush pink Nonie trenchcoat. In a dark green Givenchy ensemble.
 ?? Photos by Rex Features ?? Wearing a bespoke white Givenchy shirtdress. A dress by British label Goat.
Photos by Rex Features Wearing a bespoke white Givenchy shirtdress. A dress by British label Goat.

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