Princess Astrid wears her turquoise circlet (Photo: LISE ASERUD/AFP/Getty Images) |
Versatile New Earrings for Letizia
Queen Letizia attends the National Culture Awards (Photo: Pablo Cuadra/Getty Images) |
Photo: Pablo Cuadra/Getty Images |
Letizia wore the company’s “Kraz” earrings for the first time in public at Wednesday’s National Culture Awards ceremony. The earrings are made of two separate elements: a stud that features a cluster of three mother-of-pearl stones, and a suspended drop. For Thursday’s outing, she wore the firm’s pear-shaped drops in raspberry agate.
Photo: Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images |
At Zarzuela Palace on Thursday, Letizia demonstrated the earrings’ versatility, swapping out the raspberry drops for pear-shaped onyx drops.
Photos: Pablo Cuadra/Getty Images, Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images |
Here’s a closer look and comparison of the two different looks; the raspberry agate drops are on the left, and the onyx drops are on the right.
Queen Maud’s Pearl Tiara
Queen Maud’s Pearl Tiara, ca. 2012 (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images) |
One of the most important sparklers in Norway, Queen Maud’s pearl tiara, graced the heads of two generations of Norwegian royal ladies. It would inevitably have crowned a few more, too — if only it hadn’t been involved in a rather notorious jewelry theft!
Queen Maud wears the original tiara (Photo: Grand Ladies Site) |
The original pearl and diamond tiara that belonged to Queen Maud was given to her by her parents, King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom, when she married Prince Carl of Denmark in 1896. It is often reported that the tiara was commissioned from Garrard, then the official royal jeweler in Britain. The piece was a lovely wedding gift for a princess joining another royal clan, but it was never intended to become a central part of another royal family’s jewel collection. Maud unexpectedly became queen of newly-independent Norway in 1905 when her husband was chosen as the country’s new monarch. She wore the tiara, which has a large detachable central element, until her death in 1938.
Queen Maud wears the tiara (Image: Grand Ladies Site) |
Maud’s son, King Olav V, inherited the tiara from his mother, but it was a long time before he was reunited with the tiara (and the rest of his mother’s jewels). Maud had taken her jewelry with her to Britain for a visit in the autumn of 1938, and she unexpectedly died while she was abroad. The late queen’s jewels were kept safe in Windsor Castle for another fifteen years, for the duration of World War II and beyond. The Norwegians were finally able to reclaim the tiara in 1953, when they visited Britain for the coronation of Olav’s cousin, Queen Elizabeth II.
Olav’s son, King Harald V, is the current owner of the tiara; he received it when Maud’s jewels were divided following his wedding to Sonja Haraldsen in 1968. Sonja wore both the large and small versions of Maud’s original tiara — above, she wears the tiara during Queen Elizabeth II’s 1981 state visit to Norway. But then, in 1995, tiara tragedy struck. The piece was sent to Garrard in London to be cleaned, and while it was there, it was stolen.
Queen Sonja wears the tiara (Photo: Ian Gavan/Getty Images) |
The theft revealed the approximate value of the tiara at the time: $312,000. It has never been recovered. Garrard made a perfect replica of the original pearl and diamond tiara for the family, and that’s the tiara that Sonja has worn ever since, both in its full and smaller settings.
Crown Princess Mette-Marit wears the tiara (Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images) |
The small version of the new tiara was lent to Harald and Sonja’s daughter, Princess Märtha Louise, for her wedding to Ari Behn in 2002. It was also worn by Crown Princess Mette-Marit at the wedding of Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden in 2010 (where the upright pearls looked a bit wonky to me, possibly because she often tilts tiaras backward like headbands)…
Princess Martha Louise wears the tiara (Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images) |
…and by Märtha Louise at Princess Madeleine’s wedding in 2013. What do you think — in the grand scheme of things, is an exact, precious replica of an antique royal tiara almost as good as the real thing?