Bangkok Post

How the tiara became jewellery’s accessory of the moment

- MARK ELLWOOD

For decades, the tiara was, at best, a retro piece of costume jewellery. Yet this classic accessory has been showing up on fashion runways from the likes of Saint Laurent and Miu Miu, as well as binge-worthy television shows such as Game Of Thrones and Victoria, not to mention The Crown. Even Wonder Woman wears a uniform that features a weaponized tiara.

British jeweller Garrard & Co. has noticed a resurgence as well. Long synonymous with royalty, the warrant-holder has been the official crown jeweller for almost 200 years, and it is the company that Prince Charles tasked with making the engagement ring for the late Diana, Princess of Wales. According to Claire Scott, Garrard’s soft-spoken head of design, the company has had a surge in private commission­s for tiaras this year.

“When I first started in the trade, there were tiaras being made — definitely some, but not as many as we see now,” says Scott.

She’s sitting on a sofa in the tony, allbeige store off London’s Bond Street; the atelier is upstairs. She estimates her team will work on 20 custom tiaras this year, which, in this rarefied air, counts as a huge uptick. Under Scott’s direction, Garrard has introduced a large collection of ready-to-wear tiaras, too.

Part of the reason, Scott says, is that tiaras are unfailingl­y flattering. These mini-crowns tend to lengthen necks and straighten backs — the sheer weight of one will make even the slouchiest stand taller.

“It gives you a different feeling, a different posture,” she says. “That’s something people like. It surprises them.”

An additional benefit is that, in selfie culture, any jewellery worn on or around the face is appealing: who needs to filter a snap when you’re wearing a tiara? They are also unabashedl­y status-making jewellery pieces. Historical­ly, sporting a tiara was a tacit wealth-signaller, and the associatio­n with wealth and power has persisted. What distinguis­hes the tiara from a mere headdress is one thing: the framework, which encircles the head and is hidden with ribbons and upswept hair. It’s purely functional, allowing tiaras that could be cumbersome to sit more comfortabl­y on the head. Traditiona­lly, Scott says, tiaras were convertibl­e. Maids could painstakin­gly unhook the gems from the framework, so the same piece could be worn as a necklace. Some of Garrard’s recent commission­s offer this function.

If you’re buying a tiara, use this approximat­ion to gauge perfect placement: With thumb and forefinger, measure the distance from the bridge of your nose — between the eyebrows — and your chin. Measure that distance from the bridge of your nose to the top of your head. Wherever it lands is where a tiara should sit.

Etiquette has also been part of the tiara’s aura. Royal ladies don’t wear tiaras until they’re married, for instance.

“Your first wearing of a tiara would be on your wedding day,” Scott says. Among nobility, tiaras were usually heirlooms, pieces of family jewellery, so the family tiara would be passed down to a bride as part of her trousseau. In turn, that tiara was expected to be deeded to a daughter or daughter-in-law for use on her own wedding day — after a fit adjustment by the jeweller who had made it.

Today, though, these mini-crowns are tailor-made for the young and glamorous. And nothing has spurred the tiara revival more than the princess effect — via Frozen’s Elsa, Kate Middleton, or the upcoming nuptials for Meghan Markle. After Princess Diana’s death in 1997, there was a decade-long dearth of British royals able to wear tiaras, whether by age or inclinatio­n. But that has changed in the past five years: Soon, two married princesses will be able to rifle the royal dressing-up box.

When Kate Middleton married William, the prospectiv­e king, there was no family tiara for her to wear; instead, the Queen passed along a Cartier-designed minicrown she had received for her 18th birthday. The big question now is which tiara Meghan Markle will wear on May 19. Perhaps it will be the Garrard-produced Lover’s Knot tiara, a favourite of Princess Diana — the guest Prince Harry is most likely to miss at his wedding party.

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 ??  ?? Models wear Guo Pei during the 2018 spring/ summer Haute Couture collection fashion show on Jan 24 in Paris.
Models wear Guo Pei during the 2018 spring/ summer Haute Couture collection fashion show on Jan 24 in Paris.

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