Royal weddings bring all kinds of expectations and among them is one filled with sparkle and glitter. For we all assume a royal bride will arrive for her marriage wearing a tiara and when the wedding will result in them becoming a consort or consort in waiting, the expectation is even higher. However, some of the most high profile royal brides of recent times have decided to ditch the diadem, including one who is about to celebrate a very special anniversary. That popular queen is on this list somewhere as Royal Central takes a look at five brides who went tiara free for their royal weddings.
1. Princess Grace of Monaco
It might have been one of the most famous weddings ever, with
millions following every moment of the whirlwind romance and
glamorous celebrations, but when Oscar-winning actress
Grace Kelly married Prince Rainier III of Monaco in 1956, she
did it without a tiara.
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Grace’s bridal look had been put together by MGM’s designer, Helen
Rose, and was remarkably jewel free. Instead of a tiara, the
bride’s veil was held in place by a lace covered Juliet cap that
matched the famous wedding dress which Grace wore for her religious
ceremony at Monaco Cathedral on April 19th 1956.
2. Queen Paola of Belgium
She might have been marrying the then heir to the Belgian
throne, but when Paola Ruffo di Calabria said ‘I do’ to Albert,
Prince of Liege, she had absolutely no expectation that they would
ever end up as Belgium’s king and queen. There was no place
for a tiara in the bride’s outfit with the main focus falling on
the antique lace veil first used by Paola’s Belgian born
grandmother. The bride held this Brussels lace heirloom in place
with a simple arrangement of orange blossoms rather than a
diadem.
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Guest of honour at the wedding, on July 2nd 1959 at St
Michael and St Gudula’s Cathedral in Brussels, was the groom’s
older brother, King Baudouin of the Belgians, who was expected to
marry and pass the crown to his own children. Baudouin married the
following year but he and his wife, Queen Fabiola, suffered the
sadness of several miscarriages and never got the chance to raise a
family of their own. Instead, the throne passed to Albert when
Baudouin died in 1991.
3. Queen Sonja of Norway
Fifty years ago this summer, all eyes were on Oslo for one of
the biggest and most talked about royal weddings of recent times.
The heir to the throne of Norway, Crown Prince Harald, finally
married
Sonja Haraldsen, after seeing off opposition from those who
felt a future king shouldn’t marry a non-royal.
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The bride chose a very Sixties style wedding dress, with minimal embellishment, and a very Sixties hair ornament. There was definitely no place for a tiara here as Sonja’s tulle veil was held in place by an arrangement of white artificial flowers for her wedding at Oslo Cathedral on August 29th 1968.
4. The Duchess of Cornwall
Camilla Parker Bowles had not one but two royal wedding outfits
for her marriage to the Prince of Wales on April 9th 2005, but
neither of them had room for a tiara. While there was never any
expectation that Camilla would turn up to Windsor Guildhall for her
civil marriage decked out in a diadem, the ensemble was chosen for
her blessing at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor the same day was
another matter.
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However, rather than going for a traditional tiara, the new wife of
the heir to the throne chose to wear a statement fascinator.
Designed by Philip Treacy, who had created the cream hat worn for
the earlier ceremony, it featured a dramatic spray of gold
feathers.
5. Princess Charlene of Monaco
And so we return to Monaco. Princess Grace’s daughter in law,
and successor as consort in Monaco, also chose to go tiara free for
her religious wedding ceremony. Instead, Charlene Wittstock wore a
cluster of diamond hair clips that had once belonged to her new
husband’s grandmother.
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The bride wore the clips around the chignon at the back of her hair
during the wedding which took place at the Prince’s Palace in
Monaco on July 2nd 2011. And by doing so, she joined an
elite group of rather important royal brides who all decided to
buck modern royal wedding tradition and go tiara free on their big
day.

