I was reading Yahoo News this morning and thought I'd share this since we were just talking about it the other day...
The
Duchess of Cambridge might be mortified that her father-in-law, Prince
Charles, could let the cat out of the bag when it comes to her sartorial
spending, but he
is the one funding her shopping trips.
In the coming days, the Prince is due to reveal his financial accounts for the first time since the royal wedding, and it is estimated that the Duchess has spent £35,000 on clothes already this year, a sum only a small fraction below the £44,000 salary her husband, Prince William, takes home as a RAF search-and-rescue pilot.
In the coming days, the Prince is due to reveal his financial accounts for the first time since the royal wedding, and it is estimated that the Duchess has spent £35,000 on clothes already this year, a sum only a small fraction below the £44,000 salary her husband, Prince William, takes home as a RAF search-and-rescue pilot.
While
Kate is partial to bespoke, high-end Alexander McQueen creations, she
also offsets this by mixing affordable high street brands like Zara,
Whistles and Reiss into her hugely-desired
wardrobe - which she isn't afraid to recycle every now and then.
According to the Daily Mail the future king is only too happy to pay for outfits Kate requires for 'work-related' engagements through his official Household budget, which is funded by his Duchy of Cornwall estate.
Kate
has shown her more daring side of late where clothes are concerned,
dazzling in a lace-back Jenny Packham gown at a red carpet gala and
flashing her legs in a thigh-split dress by
Roland Mouret.
"She's a fantastic person to work with. She's a woman of her time" Mouret told The Telegraph.
"She's
very aware of her position and she's a really nice person. She's human.
It's really nice to work with someone in her position. It's… historic,
yes."
While
the creations created for Kate by the likes of McQueen, Emilia
Wickstead and Erdem can fetch several of thousands pounds per piece, the
30-year-old is quickly reducing the 'cost per
wear' by wearing each item again. Only in May, she recycled a pink
Emilia Wickstead dress within two weeks of its first outing, and has
even been pictured in a Reiss dress belonging to her mother, Carole
Middleton.
So perhaps Prince Charles can take comfort in the fact that Kate's clothing costs probably include a fair intake of dry cleaning bills too…
So perhaps Prince Charles can take comfort in the fact that Kate's clothing costs probably include a fair intake of dry cleaning bills too…
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