Royal correspondent
The changing fashion of the late Queen Elizabeth is to visit the show at a major exhibition next year at Buckingham Palace.
There will be about 200 items, including clothes and jewelery, hats and shoes, which are claimed as the biggest performance of late queen clothing.
The exhibition, the characteristic of objects from his childhood to decades of his long reign, will match with the centenary of his birth.
Among the items in Queen Elizabeth II: She will have her wedding dress in lifestyle, built in 1947 by designer Sir Norman Hartnail.
The Kings Gallery at Buckingham Palace would revolutionize the life of Queen Elizabeth, which opened the exhibition in the next spring, through organizations he wore for public events and when out of duty.
The “Archive” of the late queen -owned clothes, who died in 2022 at the age of 96, is now in the care of the Royal Collection Trust, which announced the exhibition.
One of the early surviving pieces from her wardrobe is a silver lame and tulle braidsmade dress, which she wore at the age of eight in 1934 at her uncle Duke of Kent’s wedding.
Fabrics can also serve as a diplomatic message, such as a green and white gown designed for a state banquet in Pakistan in 1961, which included the national colors of the country.
More comfort showing the fashion trends of the 1970s will be part of the printed fabric display, as well as with design sketches and handwritten correspondence about fabric options.
More everyday clothes of the heavenly queen will also be on the show, including ride jackets, tartan skirts and headscarvs.
The exhibition curator, Caroline de Guitott said, “In the year when she turned 100, the exhibition would be a celebration of Queen Elizabeth’s distinctive British style and its permanent fashion heritage,” said the curator of the exhibition.
He said that performance fashion would be “to tell the story of the lifetime of thoughtful style options – from her hands to the role and the soft power behind her clothes, to the extraordinary craftsmanship behind each dress”.