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Meghan Markle dares not to wear sleeves at the Queen’s birthday celebration

Each June, the British army celebrates the birthday of the reigning monarch (which has been Queen Elizabeth II for all of the recorded time) in a ceremony called Trooping the Colour. (Just roll that phrase around for a second.) But the real event this year wasn’t the military exercises that take place outside Buckingham Palace—instead, it was the Trooping the Colour debut of one Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, just shy of a month after  her wedding to Prince Harry in May.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex attend Trooping the Colour.

This is the first Trooping The Duchess of Sussex is attending following the #RoyalWedding pic.twitter.com/bZhHBhxQg4

— The Royal Family (@RoyalFamily) June 9, 2018

“Meghan Markle may be a royal now, but she’s still taking risks!” proclaimed  People on Saturday, adding her latest breach with tradition to a long list of minute deviations from already informal royal codes. Over the past year, Markle has been breathlessly observed in numerous casual buns with carefree flyaway bits; she once gave a young girl an autograph, and she even dared not to wear pantyhose to a photocall last year. This time, her trespass was a sartorial one: In a Carolina Herrera dress, an off-the-shoulder silhouette in blush pink with buttons up one side of the bodice, she strayed from the unspoken tradition that royal women shall wear sleeves to the event. For the past seven years, Kate Middleton—Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge—has worn dresses whose sleeves reach past the elbow, again according to  People, and ditto Princess Diana, who began attending the ceremony even before marrying into the royal family, wearing a custom floral Bill Pashley suit for her first appearance in 1981.

This year, Kate again opted for something a bit more demure, a pale blue Alexander McQueen dress with a square neckline, slightly poufed shoulders, and three-quarter-length sleeves. Both sisters-in-law wore dramatic, saucer-shaped fascinators—Meghan’s, by milliner Philip Treacy; Kate’s, by Juliette Botterill—in colours coordinating their dresses.

Taken from W Magazine. Read the original here

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