This Week's Obsession: The Platinum Jubilee

This Week's Obsession: The Platinum Jubilee

What could be more festive than something called a Platinum Jubilee, and of course, for those of us in Britain, this is a big deal. In fact, it's the first Platinum Jubilee in the history of the British Monarchy commemorating a landmark of 70-year service to Great Britain and the Commonwealth.  Brits have been given an extra bank holiday to celebrate.  The upcoming four-day weekend, where pubs will stay open until 1am, promises to be one of great jubilation!

 Over the weekend the calendar is full with the Trooping of the Colour on Thursday, the Party at the Palace on Saturday and the Platinum Jubilee Pageant on Sunday.  The capital’s restaurants, bars, and cultural institutions are busy hanging bunting, firing up barbecues and perfecting their Pimms ahead of the biggest weekend of the year.  From summer fetes and set menus to art festivals and more, there is plenty of ways to celebrate. If you’re not in Britain, then you can certainly catch some of the revelry on the TV and enjoy a glass or two of Pimms (don’t forget the garnish!)

If you are in London, read about more things to do from our partner, Luxury London

 

Jewels fit for a Queen

For jewellery lovers there is a big treat in store. Magnificent jewels belonging to Her Majesty The Queen will go on display this summer as part of special displays celebrating the Platinum Jubilee at Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle and the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh. Each display explores a historic occasion in Her Majesty’s 70-year reign – the Accession, the Coronation and previous Jubilees – through photographs, paintings, works of art, and items of The Queen’s dress and jewellery.

Queen Elisabeth Diamond Diadem

In the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace, which can be visited as part of the annual Summer Opening for the first time since 2019, official portraits of The Queen taken by society photographer Dorothy Wilding just weeks after the Accession will be shown alongside items of jewellery worn for the portrait sittings. These include the Diamond Diadem, one of Her Majesty’s most widely recognised pieces of jewellery. Wilding’s photographs were used as the basis of The Queen’s image on postage stamps from 1953 until 1971, as well as providing the official portrait of Her Majesty which was sent to every British embassy throughout the world, making the Diadem instantly recognisable to millions of people across the globe.

The Diamond Diadem was created for the famously extravagant coronation of George IV in 1821. It is set with 1,333 brilliant-cut diamonds and consists of a band with two rows of pearls either side of a row of diamonds, above which are diamonds set in the form of a rose, a thistle and two shamrocks, the national emblems of England, Scotland and Ireland. The Diadem was inherited in 1837 by Queen Victoria, who was frequently painted and photographed wearing it, including on several early postage stamps such as the Penny Black. The Diadem passed to Queen Alexandra, Queen Mary, Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and then to Her Majesty The Queen, who wore it on the day of her Coronation and has worn it on her journey to and from the State Opening of Parliament since the first year of her reign.

The spectacular Delhi Durbar necklace will also be on display at Buckingham Palace. The necklace incorporates nine emeralds originally owned by Queen Mary’s grandmother, the Duchess of Cambridge, as well as an 8.8 carat diamond pendant cut from the Cullinan diamond – the largest diamond ever found. The necklace was made for Queen Mary as part of a suite of jewellery created for the Delhi Durbar in 1911. Her Majesty The Queen inherited the necklace in 1953 and wore it in a portrait sitting for Dorothy Wilding in 1956 – thought to have been their last sitting together before Wilding’s retirement in 1958.

At Windsor Castle, the Coronation Dress and Robe of Estate worn by The Queen for her Coronation at Westminster Abbey on 2 June 1953 will be displayed. To recognise the importance of her role as Head of the Commonwealth Nations, Her Majesty asked for the emblems of the seven independent states of which she was monarch to be incorporated into the design of her Coronation Dress, together with those of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. The emblems were embroidered in gold and silver thread and pastel-coloured silks, encrusted with seed pearls, sequins and crystals.

The Queen often wears brooches that represent the emblems of Commonwealth countries while visiting or meeting their representatives. Visitors to the Windsor Castle display will see brooches including: the Canadian Maple-leaf Brooch, worn by Her Majesty (then Princess Elizabeth) on her first visit to Canada in 1951; the Flame-Lily Brooch, the emblem of Zimbabwe, which was pinned to The Queen’s mourning clothes when she returned to Britain from Kenya after the death of her father in 1952; the New Zealand Silver Fern Brooch, presented by the Women of Auckland on Christmas Day, 1953; the Australian Wattle Brooch, presented on Her Majesty’s first visit to Australia in 1954; and the Sri Lanka Brooch, presented to The Queen during a State Visit to Sri Lanka in 1981.

Queen Elisabeth Sri Lankan Brooch

For more information visit The Royal Collection Trust

Sotheby’s London to show the Lady Diana’s wedding tiara for the first time since 1960.  But that’s not all, in celebration of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, the auction house is hosting the UK’s largest tiara exhibition in 20 years.

lady diana's wedding tiara

 

Power & Image: Royal & Aristocratic Tiaras, which goes on display from May 28th will feature over 40 tiaras in the largest exhibition of its kind in the UK for two decades. Reflecting the evolution of tiara design through monarchic taste, societal shifts and the influence of contemporary art, the exhibition will highlight pieces from the Napoleonic Empire and the Belle Epoque era, as well as including Art Deco, Romantic Naturalism and contemporary designs.

 queen victoria diamond and emerald tiara

Alongside the Spencer Tiara, other pieces on loan to Sotheby’s include an emerald and diamond tiara designed by Prince Albert for Queen Victoria, a cameo and enamel diadem reputedly worn by Josephine Bonaparte, and jewels worn by guests at the Queen’s 1953 coronation.  

The tiaras will be on display at Sotheby’s London from 28 May – 15 June.

The Queen's Jubilee Looks 

At the Palace of Holyroodhouse, visitors will see a display of outfits worn by Her Majesty on occasions to celebrate the Silver, Golden and Diamond Jubilees. In 1977 for The Queen’s Silver Jubilee, the royal couturier Sir Hardy Amies designed a striking ensemble of dress, coat and stole in pink silk crêpe and chiffon with a matching hat designed by Frederick Fox with flowerheads hanging from silk stems. The ensemble was worn at the National Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral on 7 June 1977 marking the 25th anniversary of The Queen’s Accession.

 

Golden jubilee outfit

On display for the first time will be Her Majesty’s Diamond Jubilee ensemble, worn to the National Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral and a luncheon at Guildhall, City of London, as part of the celebrations on 5 June 2012. The ensemble was designed by Angela Kelly, Personal Adviser to The Queen (Wardrobe) and consists of a pale turquoise dress and coat embroidered with scattered silver flowers, with a coordinating hat.

Alongside the ensembles worn by The Queen will be a selection of gifts presented during official engagements in Scotland, as well as a group of works relating to Her Majesty’s first official visit to Edinburgh in 1953, soon after her Coronation. Examples include a silver model of a miner’s Davy lamp, presented in 1958 when The Queen made her first descent into a working coal mine on the opening of the Rothes Colliery in Fife, and the ceremonial key to the Palace of Holyroodhouse, which is presented to Her Majesty at the start of Royal Week at the Palace each summer.

Diamond jubilee ensemble

 Find tickets here