It was
the greatest gathering of royals outside of a major coronation: the wedding of
HRH Crown Prince Hussein, to HRH Princess Rajwa Al Saif.
It was also a striking display of the power of
modest fashion, as guests including Crown Princess Mary of Denmark, Crown
Princess Victoria of Sweden, Princess Beatrice of Britain, and various other
attendees wore long gowns with airy capes flying off their shoulders, or
draped, fluted sleeves, in recognition of Jordanian mores.
اضافة اعلان
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Queen Rania wore a high-neck black Dior dress
with gold-toned embroidery on the back and at the wrists and throat. Catherine,
Princess of Wales, accompanied by her husband, Prince William, had on a similar
style in blush pink, with embroidery at the bodice, by Lebanese designer Elie
Saab.
Saab also made the bride’s wedding gown, a
stately sheath with an asymmetric neckline, a draped bodice and what looked
like an acres-long overskirt, its grandeur just slightly subverted by the fact
that Al Saif was wearing flat shoes.
The revolution of the shoeFlats! That’s modern monarchy for you (everything
being relative). The shoes made for the most unexpected statement of the event,
followed only by the gown worn by the first lady, Jill Biden: a light mauve
column with a pearl-trimmed keyhole neckline by Lebanese designer Reem Acra
that may have looked startlingly familiar to some.
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It was, after all, the same dress Biden had
worn to host the South Korean state dinner just over a month before. Even for a
public figure who has made a habit of re-wearing her clothes — and though the
choice of designer and style was diplomatically spot-on (more so than at the
state dinner) — to appear in the dress twice in such close succession at two
major public events guaranteed to yield a photo to go round the world was a
pretty radical move.
And one that was impossible to miss. She has
pledged her troth, anyway.
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