Justine Picardie on Fashioning the Crown
Monday 2nd March 2026
Saint Andrew's Episcopal, St Andrews, Queens Terrace St Andrews KY16 9QF
6.50pm
7.30pm
Justine Picardie on Fashioning the Crown
Just in time for Queen Elizabeth's centenary year, Justine Picardie joins us for this fascinating look at recent British history through the lens of royal fashion.
From the birth of the house of Windsor in 1917, its leading women - Queen Mary, the Queen Mother, the Duchess of Windsor and Queen Elizabeth II - faced abdication and assassination, revolution and the rise of fascism, the threat of invasion and all-out war. Their sartorial decisions, alongside those of their royal husbands, projected power and perpetuity, diplomacy and defiance.
In this cinematic story of espionage and exquisite couture, Justine Picardie reveals the undercover lives of the creators behind the facade - including Hardy Amies, Cecil Beaton, Norman Hartnell and Edward Molyneux - and traces the ways in which visual iconography safeguarded the monarchy even when their reign seemed to be hanging by a thread.
Drawing on original research in the Royal Archives and her own experiences at Balmoral, Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace, Picardie explores the family feuds and international conflicts that challenged the Crown, and how royal fashion is wielded as a weapon.
Justine Picardie is the author of six books, including Miss Dior: A Story of Courage and Couture, and the international bestseller, Coco Chanel: The Legend and the Life. She is a contributing editor to Harper's Bazaar and was formerly an investigative journalist for the Sunday Timesand columnist for the Telegraph. She was also editor of the Observer Magazine and features director of Vogue.