Princess Louise, Princess Royal and Duchess of Fife, ca. 1905 [1] |
Princess Louise [2] |
We know that the piece was made by Hancocks, a London jeweler, thanks to additional reporting from the period. Ursula has excerpted reports on the wedding from the Graphic, which devoted an entire special issue to the Fife nuptials. The publication describes the fringe as being “of elegant design of alternating and graduating rays, varying from nearly two inches long in the centre to half an inch at the extreme ends.” Additionally, they call the piece “a superb tiara of lovely brilliants of chaste design,” noting, “the rays of diamonds being nearly two inches long in the centre, and graduating downwards towards the ends, while each alternate ray has a pretty tapering effect, which materially adds to its beauty” [4].
Commentary from the Graphic also connects the fringe tiara to its Russian inspiration: “The tiara is a very large one, and is so flexible that it can be bent upon the hair to suit any style of coiffure, and can also form a necklace. The design is Russian, consisting of straight lines, but the jewellers have secured considerable lightness of effect by the introduction of slender lines between the taller ones” [4]. The Illustrated London News emphasized the tiara’s connection to Louise’s parents: “The Prince and Princess of Wales presented their daughter with a beautiful tiara of fine brilliants, of elegant design of alternating and graduating rays, varying from nearly two inches long in the centre to half an inch at the extreme ends. By a simple arrangement it also forms a beautiful and graceful necklace.”
Louise was photographed wearing the fringe as a necklace on multiple occasions (including the two pictures above); she also wore the piece as a tiara. And she wasn’t the only Fife lady to be pictured in the fringe tiara. Her elder daughter, Princess Alexandra — who inherited the Fife dukedom in her own right in 1912 — was photographed wearing the tiara. In the portrait, which also includes her husband (and, ahem, first cousin once removed) Prince Arthur of Connaught, Alexandra wears the fringe as a bandeau, settling the piece low across her forehead. Whether or not Alexandra owned the tiara herself or borrowed it from her mother (who would still have been alive at the time the portrait was taken) is less clear.
Alexandra did inherit another major tiara from her mother — the Fife tiara — and then subsequently passed it along to her nephew, James Carnegie, the 3rd Duke of Fife, who also inherited his aunt’s titles. Whether the fringe took a similar path isn’t certain. If Alexandra’s sister, Maud, inherited the fringe, however, it would likely also have ended up with James. He was her only child, and he’s the only surviving grandchild of Princess Louise.
Update: The diamond fringe is now on display at Kensington Palace as a part of the Tiaras Revealed exhibition! Read more over here!