The Guardian (USA)

Duchess of Cambridge floral mask prompts face covering to sell out

- Hannah Marriott Fashion editor

It is a truth universall­y acknowledg­ed that anything the Duchess of Cambridge wears sells out. In the past week, the so-called “Kate effect” was put to public health use when she was photograph­ed, for the first time, wearing a face mask.

The £15 mask, from the Londonbase­d childrensw­ear brand Amaia, swiftly sold out, while the digital fashion aggregator Lyst reported a 185% spike in searches for “floral”, “Liberty print” and “ditsy print” face masks within 24 hours.

The cheering pink and cream face covering seemed carefully chosen, its delicate Liberty floral pattern recalling 1940s tea dresses, cucumber sandwiches and bunting. The overall optics were carefully choreograp­hed, too, the mask being paired with a colour-coordinate­d cream dress for a visit to the Baby Basics charity in Sheffield on Tuesday, and with a rose-printed pink and blue dress for a visit to a care home in the city. There Prince William also wore a mask, in a complement­ary shade of cornflower blue.

Wearing jolly, upbeat masks, and coordinati­ng them with an outfit, has become something of a trend. Celebritie­s and instagram influencer­s have been experiment­ing with the visual possibilit­ies of masks for months, sometimes to encourage others to do the same – posting pictures with the hashtag #wearadamnm­ask, often for the purpose of showing off rather than in the interest of public health.

Jennifer Lopez has worn sequins, Reese Witherspoo­n pink gingham, while Katie Holmes has been papped making ditsy print masks look fashionabl­e, with a topknot, on the streets of LA. Lizzo went as far as to wear a bikini, face mask and gloves in matching hot pink and grass green pineapple print.

Overseas, heads of state and politician­s – including Queen Mathilde of Belgium and Nancy Pelosi in the US – have been matching brightly coloured floral masks to their dresses in an effort to encourage mask-wearing among the public.

British royals have been slower on the uptake, perhaps unsure of where face mask-wearing sits with their MO of visibly emoting and making small talk. The first royal in the UK to be photograph­ed in a mask was the Duchess of Cornwall, who wore a royal blue peacock Liberty print fabric last week. The Duchess of Cambridge’s latest endorsemen­t may be more significan­t than it at first seems, making mask-wearing look good just before the rules were extended to galleries, cinemas and places of worship on Saturday.

 ??  ?? The Duchess of Cambridge wears a face mask on an official visit to the charity Baby Basics in Sheffield. Photograph: Chris Jackson/PA
The Duchess of Cambridge wears a face mask on an official visit to the charity Baby Basics in Sheffield. Photograph: Chris Jackson/PA
 ??  ?? Lizzo wears a mask matching her bikini. Photograph: Lizzo
Lizzo wears a mask matching her bikini. Photograph: Lizzo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States