Showing posts with label Par Engsheden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Par Engsheden. Show all posts

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Week in Review: Crown Princess Victoria, 4-10 December

Here's what Victoria wore from 4-10 December:

  1. Attending a meeting on the 2011 Nobel Prize laureates, 5 December.
  2. Lunch at the palace for a politician, 6 December. Legit boots instead of shooties? I'll take it!
  3. a and b) The Nobel Prize Awards Ceremony, 10 December. Though I originally called it as Elie Saab, and others thought perhaps Malene Birger, it is indeed a Pär Engsheden creation. Doesn't matter, I still love it, and I love this too:
Baby's first Nobel! Awww.

Photos: Kungahuset/Daylife/Getty Images/SVT/Style.com

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Week in Review: Crown Princess Victoria, 13-19 June

Here's what Crown Princess Victoria wore the week of 13-19 June:
  1. Gym visit, plus a party at Madeleine's apartment, 15 June.
  2. Cathedral visit, 16 June.
  3. County Governors Dinner, 16 June.  Roger Vivier shoes.
  4. Cathedral visit, 17 June.
  5. Private wedding dinner at Drottningholm, 17 June, a) on the Elie Saab runway, and b) in action.  Repeat from those fantastic portraits released early this year.
  6. Cathedral Visit, 18 June.
  7. Government reception, 18 June.  Also Elie Saab Spring 2010 Couture.
  8. Pre-wedding dinner and concert, 18 June, a) on the red carpet, and b) on the Elie Saab runway.
  9. The wedding, 19 June.  Oh, did you forget that was this week?  Good thing I reminded you.
Ho-hum, just another week in the life of a Crown Princess.

Best and Best of the Week
 I tried to name a worst of the week, I really did, but the closest I came was #6, and there's nothing wrong with it.  Seriously, if that's the worst you can do, you deserve 2 bests. 

Victoria and Daniel are on their honeymoon now, and they don't have anything scheduled until 21 August (hell of a honeymoon, huh?), so it might be a while before we have another week in review post for Victoria.  

Photos: Reuters/Daylife/Scanpix/Aftonbladet/John Foremost/Camera Press/Marcio Madeira/Expressen

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Crown Princess Victoria's Wedding: The Dress


Oh man, I'm feeling the urge to redo my Top 10 best royal wedding dresses.  I loved, loved this from the second Victoria stepped out of the car.  Pär Engsheden, just as we all suspected, was the man placed in charge of the most anticipated dress of the year, and he pulled out a winner.

The dress was cream-colored duchess silk satin.  The rounded collar was turned down all the way around, ending in a v-shape in the back, where the dress was fastened with buttons covered in silk.  A cummerbund-style sash emphasized Victoria's waist (she just looks so good in anything that highlights her waist, doesn't she?), and it looks like the sash was possibly separate from the dress itself.  The short sleeves were perfect for keeping modesty in the church but also for the June weather, since they spent a lot of time outdoors during the course of the day.


The skirt itself fell into a short train, manageable enough for the reception and dancing (excuse the poor quality screen cap on the right, I can't find a professional picture showing it well enough):


And for the ceremony, a nearly 5 meter (16 foot) long detachable train was added.  It attached from the waist, and had a border detail to it.


The train followed the shape of the veil, which is the traditional Swedish bridal veil.  Queen Sofia's lace veil was first worn in 1932, and was worn by Queen Silvia at her wedding in 1976.


Of course, the veil wasn't the only traditional accessory Victoria wore.  The Cameo tiara was the odds-on favorite in bridal tiara guesses, and as suspected Victoria followed through with tradition and wore it just as her mother and two of her father's sisters had.  She also wore the earrings and bracelet that go with the Cameo parure (so happy she didn't spring for the necklace, too!).


I have to say, this is the way to wear the Cameo.  This Napoleanic-era antique is such a statement piece (to say the least), you have to give it room to breathe.  Having a more open neckline and leaving the veil to the back (rather than Silvia's bunched up effect) made this outing much more successful than its last royal wedding display:


I thought the simple bridesmaid dresses carried through with Victoria's dress style, but also were a little reminiscent of Silvia's own dress.  Great touch, especially since June 19 was the King and Queen's wedding anniversary too.


Finally, the bride carried a bouquet of multiple varieties of white flowers, and wore custom shoes in the same silk as the dress with a bejeweled buckle by Roger Vivier.

Seriously, I love everything about it.  I had my fingers crossed Victoria would continue her recent streak of sartorial wins down the aisle, and she came through.  Gown of the year indeed.

What did you think of The Dress?

Photos: Daylife/All Over Press/Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images/svt

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Meet Pär Engsheden

The Swedish Royal Court has been absolutely mum on Victoria’s wedding dress. Even the designer has remained a secret, but most are guessing the honor will go to Sweden’s own Pär Engsheden. Some have speculated that she might go with a foreign designer (her mother was married in Christian Dior, and she and her stylist were spotted making private visits to some Parisian houses), but Victoria herself once said she’s like to have a Swedish designer make her dress, and Pär is the only one on the official guest list.

If true, it wouldn’t be a surprising choice: Engsheden has become one of the Bernadotte ladies’ go-to gown providers. And they’ve achieved varying degrees of success with his clothes: while he was behind Victoria’s turn of purple perfection at the last Nobel Awards presentation, he was also responsible for the night Madeleine’s cleavage won several Nobel Awards of its own (popularly known as “the Baywatch dress”).


More Par creations:


Clearly, this is a guy that likes a statement; if he can’t make it in color, in what other form might it manifest itself?