Eine antique Demi-Parure, die sowohl als Brosche, Haarbandeau, Diadem und Devante de Corsage getragen werden kann. Ein Schmuckstück aus naturalistischen Blüten, Knospen und Blättern aus Diamanten, Gold und Silber gefertigt.
Der Schmuck ist aus dem Besitz von Prinzessin Caroline von Monaco, Prinzessin von Hannover, von ihrem ersten Mann Stefano Casiraghi
Charlene’s hair was swept up into a tight chignon. “I’m not wearing a tiara,” she said. “Instead, Princess Caroline has lent me some beautiful diamond hair clips which belonged to her grandmother. I did have a tiara made by Van Cleef & Arpels but I decided to put it on display at the Oceanographic Museum, and I will wear it for my first official engagement.”
A Family piece Princess Caroline inherited from Princess Charlotte. This was said by Princess Charlene in her Interview which accompanies the photos of her preparing for the Wedding.It was a lent to Princess Charlene as bridal tiara, diamond hair ornament.
Anchoring the veil was not a tiara, as I had hoped, but a diamond hair ornament thought to be a 19th century piece on loan from Princess Caroline, who usually wears the floral pieces as brooches.
Though you know I love a good tiara, I thought this hair ornament was absolutely beautiful (and certainly plenty packed with diamonds). I particularly love the way it sneaks into her gorgeous hairstyle on one side.
The jewels above worne by the Princess Charlene as bridal jewelry, are part of the rose flower and buds spray brooch demi parure of diamonds, in naturalistic style of Princess Caroline of Monaco. The piece of diamond jewelry she was wearing in her hair is part of the so called “Traine de corsage“.
Guirlande de feuillages en diamants or Traine de corsage is the french expression by which these jewels were known at the end of the XIXth century. Those jewels which generally consist in a serie of brooches (generally diamonds leaves and flowers or only leaves) which can be assembled to form a traine around the décolleté of the lady who wears them.
Sources: U.Butschal;;19th century french jewellery- Henry Vever;
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