EMILY PRESCOTT: Meghan Markle’s wedding dress designer will unveil her new high street range
The designer behind the Duchess of Sussex’s wedding dress will unveil her new collection next month with high street designer Uniqlo.
Clare Waight Keller, who was creative director at luxury brands such as Givenchy and Chloe, has created a capsule collection for the Japanese chain.
With top prices of £109, it will be a lot more affordable than Meghan’s wedding dress – which reportedly cost £110,000.
The September release date is just in time for winter, but I don’t see much need for the sweaters, trench coats, and chunky shoes from Meghan’s sunny California collection!
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex pictured outside St George’s Chapel in Windsor on their wedding day in 2018
British fashion designer Clare Waight Keller, who designed Meghan Markle’s wedding dress, is launching her own range for the high street
Julie’s comic for older women
Julie Montagu, Viscountess of Hinchingbrooke
She’s already been trying to drag historic homes into the 21st century with her YouTube program on British mansions and castles, but now, US-born Julie Montagu, the Viscountess of Hinchingbrooke, is arguing for a different goal: the representation of older women’s bodies on social media.
Julie, 49, shared a series of bikini photos on Instagram, saying on the left: ‘In a society that glorifies the journeys and bodies of people in their 20s and 30s, we sometimes forget that there’s an entire chapter of life waiting to be explored. celebrated.’
As if that wasn’t enough, Julie, whose husband Luke will one day be the Earl of Sandwich, also shared the secret to her muscular physique – two decades of dedicated yoga.
It’s not too late to start!
They’ve had complaints about a new road being built to their home in Oxfordshire, so it’s no surprise that the Beckhams’ neighbors are just as annoyed at plans to convert the roof of one of their barns into a home office .
One of them has contacted the council, accusing the Beckhams of using the home office as a ploy to circumvent planning rules.
The charge reads: ‘This is just a back door to turn this shed into a home.
“It’s a barn and it should stay that way.”