In a new official portrait, the Duchess of Cambridge appears in clothes that meet the requirement to wear a British clothing label. And probably a little more.
The first official portrait of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge has been unveiled. The painting exhibited at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge is the work of British portraitist Jamie Corrett. It features Kate Middleton in an emerald green gown with metallic silk, ruffled sleeves and accentuated shoulders. The model signed by The Vampire’s Wife is the same one she wore during her March 2020 visit to the Guinness Brewery in Dublin. If this choice responds to a clear desire to support British creativity, it also aims to change the style of perception it can. be composed of Prince William’s wife.
Because we know it especially through the classic wardrobe, which consists of wide and straight trousers, small bags, turtle necks, big coats, all, always a little away from the trends. It means that her relationship with fashion is changing, she is here with the generations with a brand recognized by famous style celebrities such as Sienna Miller, Alexa Chung, Chloë Grace Morenz or Maggie Gyllenhaal.
Seduction and seduction
There’s a woman behind The Vampire Wife: Susie Cave. She is not a vampire, but the wife of Australian singer Nick Cave. The former model founded her brand in 2014 based on a simple desire to wear clothes she couldn’t find anywhere else. A customer soon arrives, seduced by her retro silhouettes, sophisticated glamour. Her dresses play on seduction, but above all on style, with ruffles, shimmering fabrics and puffed sleeves that have become her trademark. His brand name is taken from an abandoned novel by Nick Cave, who dabbled in literature frequently in his singing career.
Prince Charles gives Kate Middleton a flying kiss
Fate took a turn for the worse in 2015 when their then 15-year-old son Arthur fell to his death from a cliff at Ovingdean, near Brighton, UK. Suzy Cave doesn’t give up on her quirky designs. He continues to infuse a sense of urgency and survival, and will explain in several interviews that he has never stopped working to keep grief at bay.
Source: Le Figaro