The Guardian (USA)

Lady Hale on her Brexit brooch: 'You can do a lot with a spider'

- As told to Ellie Violet Bramley

This outfit – a dress and the brooch – epitomises the sort of look that I have when I’m sitting as a judge. I wore this black crepe A-line dress, with velvet bands across it and a rather pretty stand-up collar, for the prorogatio­n decision, but the black spider brooch in this picture is a different one.

The spider in this photograph lived on that dress and I had decided that it was the appropriat­e dress to wear for the prorogatio­n judgment, but when I got it out of the wardrobe the spider was no longer there. It had obviously dropped off at some point and I couldn’t find it, so, because a spider lived on that dress, I looked in my drawer and found another redder, silvery, sparkly one.

A lot was made of my wearing that brooch on that day. I know that Madeleine

Albright was quite deliberate­ly giving messages with her brooches – she has written a lovely book about it called Read My Pins; I’ve got it. But I wasn’t giving any sort of hidden message – I’m not a politician, so I don’t play any part in politics. If I had realised some of the things that people might have speculated, then I would probably have worn an innocuous bunch of flowers.

I started to wear brooches when I was in the family division of the high court. I was wearing, on the whole, dark suits and my husband started buying me brooches to lighten them. The first brooch he bought for me was a spider. I don’t think there is any particular reason I have so many spider brooches. The spider is a very good artistic theme – you can do a lot with a spider. The same is true of frogs, I have a lot of

frogs.

Of course, once one person sees you wearing something, then other people – members of the family or friends who want to give me a present – start giving you much the same. And so the collection grows. I don’t know how many I have, but there are a lot.

None of my brooches are worth very much; they are all costume jewellery. The infamous spider brooch was from Cards Galore; it cost about £12. They are mostly creatures of one sort or another. Bugs, beetles, a dragonfly, a fox and a nice little cat. But I think to say I was a fan of the natural world might be putting it a little high.

I tend to wear them more in London than I do up here in Yorkshire. I haven’t been wearing many brooches in lockdown, because I’m not going out anywhere. But I have been trying to keep presentabl­e – I’ve got quite a lot of new casual clothes, like jeans and tops from Joules; comfortabl­e, but not jogging bottoms or pyjamas.

People comment on women’s appearance much more than they comment on men’s, but I recall in another case most of the press comment was not on what I was wearing during the hearing – it was all on one of my fellow justice’s ties. I had taken great care to wear a different dress and brooch each day and nobody noticed!

When I got to the House of Lords, I decided I would wear a reasonably sober dress but doll it up a bit [rather than try to blend into the suits of her male colleagues]. I would wear colourful scarves because I was rather anxious that it should be apparent that there was a woman there now and that it was necessary to stand out – not in an aggressive or dramatic way, but just to make it clear that it was no longer all men.

 ??  ?? ‘People comment on women’s appearance much more than they comment on men’s’ ... Lady Hale. Photograph: Kevin Leighton/Lady Hale and the UKSC
‘People comment on women’s appearance much more than they comment on men’s’ ... Lady Hale. Photograph: Kevin Leighton/Lady Hale and the UKSC
 ??  ?? Lady Hale. Photograph: Kevin Leighton/ Lady Hale and the UKSC
Lady Hale. Photograph: Kevin Leighton/ Lady Hale and the UKSC

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