Prince George is dressed that way so he won’t look like a ‘suburban’ peasant

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As many of us have discussed before, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have a thing about appearing “normal” and “middle class.” Kate actually IS middle class, and the fact that she doesn’t hide it has been celebrated in some circles and criticized in other circles. No one really believes Kate’s middle-class roots are a bad thing, but throughout her marriage to William, it does feel like both of them play-act this idea that they’re just a normal middle-class family. William in particular seems to fetishize this idea of “normalcy,” perhaps as way of hiding his own enormous privilege, wealth and lack of direction. What’s my point? I don’t know. People are still talking about how Prince George is dressed like Little Lord Fauntleroy circa 1942 and the Daily Mail’s “etiquette expert” is theorizing that George is dressed that way because William and Kate don’t want him to look too suburban/middle class. I thought they loved all things middle class?!?!

With all eyes on them as they toured Canada, the Royal Family pulled out all the stops to ensure they looked picture perfect. Often colour-coordinated, they were no doubt well aware that the photographs of their first official tour as a family-of-four would be remembered for years to come – and tried to dress fittingly for the special occasion. And fashion fans were quick to notice that Prince George exclusively wore shorts – and it’s certainly not the first time. Indeed, the three-year-old is rarely seen in trousers and, according to an etiquette expert, there’s a very interesting reason behind it.

Etiquette expert and MailOnline columnist, William Hanson, claims that shorts on young boys are, in fact, a silent British class marker and trousers are deemed ‘suburban’, which no self-respecting royal would want to be considered.

He explained: ‘Not only does The Duchess of Cambridge have to worry about what she is wearing in public but she has to dress her own children and find a balance between royal tradition and heritage and more proletariat customs, such as the “suburban” habit of making young boys wear trousers. Although I don’t really think that the sartorial rule of shorts for young boys would be a new one for Catherine. I would suspect that her own mother and mother’s friends knew this – as more well-heeled middle class mothers do – and dressed their own boys accordingly.’

Whilst the children won over the world on their first royal tour, some social media users were quick to comment on their ‘post-war’ look – suggesting that little Prince George and Princess Charlotte were dressed ‘for the 1950s’ or a ’19th century gothic novella’.

[From The Daily Mail]

From my very limited experience with children, I don’t think it’s a matter of “making” children adhere to whatever class-structured style is en vogue. George is getting to the age where he’s going to want to start dressing like his peers, and his peers – many of them suburban, middle-class types – wear trousers and trainers. At some point (likely very soon), George is just going to refuse to wear those stupid socks and shorts everywhere. While I do think George is a really cute little boy, it absolutely feels like Will and Kate are dressing him up in a costume. A costume for Kensington Palace’s home horror movies, perhaps?

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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138 Responses to “Prince George is dressed that way so he won’t look like a ‘suburban’ peasant”

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  1. Flahoola says:

    Maybe he’s dressed more comfortably when at home and not in the public eye?! He’s a cutie patootie regardless and I do have a soft spot for that style on him!

    • Whipmyhair48 says:

      I think so to. Just as Will doesn’t wear suits and Kate probably loves wearing some lululemons.

    • Imqrious2 says:

      There was an article, some time back (sorry, can’t find it right now), which she said she dresses him this way publicly so that when his out in “civilian” time, he’s not as recognizable. There have been pap shots of him out with Nanny Maria where he’s wearing pants and sneakers.

      http://katemiddletonreview.com/2016/01/12/new-photo-of-kate-middleton-and-prince-george-out-shopping-published-in-australian-magazine/

      http://radaronline.com/photos/kate-middleton-prince-george-natural-history-museum-pics/

      • Mamunia says:

        Thanks for posting these.

      • Naya says:

        This. Someone on Jezebel had a great writeup on this. They comb his hair differently when he is on public duty too. This is basically his work uniform and they hope that it makes it easier for him to blend in when he is off duty. They’ll never be able to casually walk through the streets without being recognized but they want that for him especially in his youth. William was probably the first royal to grow up in a country where everybody knew exactly what he looked like, he wants better for his kids.

      • Cee says:

        I agree- I thought this was the reason for their more formal clothes when in official outings or photo ops.

      • LAK says:

        Naya: Not true.

        That would be George 1 whose image was put on the country’s coins. That meant he was recognised more than other monarchs before him who had relied on portraits which weren’t accessible to the general populace.

        By Victoria’s time, a mixture of portraiture and regular photography circulated widely as well as coinage meant lots of people knew what they looked like.

        WH are the first royal children to grow up in the age of saturated media, but they are also in the generation benefiting from more privacy than royals of previous centuries. No one is asking them to live entirely in public unlike their predecessors.

      • Lex says:

        I wonder if it as well helps George to know when to behave a certain way? You’re in your Prince clothes now, and you know what that means!

        Maybe as a way to teach him to segregate parts of his life so he can feel ‘off’ at times.

      • birdie says:

        Re: official outfits. It is possible but I don’t think the Cambridges are that smart. They just seem to be re-creating William’s childhood as if they are trying to “fix” it. They then to use the imagery to appeal to the general public who are more focused on preserving Diana’s memory and gushing over “princess” dresses and jewels instead of paying attention to the lack of work they do and the amount of money they spend.

        I remember reading a theory somewhere awhile back that the Swedish crown princess actually this with her child – have work clothing. the daughter always seem to have a bow in her hair at official events (and no other time when papped) so it is con that maybe the bow is for the child to recognise it is a work/public event and she needs to be on good behaviour.

  2. meija says:

    Cute kids I’m just saying.

    • Susiecue says:

      They really are gorgeous. George is going to be a little heartthrob just like his dad (was) when he’s older.

  3. Clare says:

    Oh man, this is just how British posh folk dress their kids. Every photo of my husband as a kid – he’s dressed almost exactly like this PLUS a goofy little cap. Sometimes even a tie (but that’s just for school I think?)

    Rather hilarious given that I spent 80% of my childhood dressed as either some kind of animal or fruit.

    • Secret squirrel says:

      You must have had an interesting childhood!

    • LinaLamont says:

      “…I spent 80% of my childhood dressed as either some kind of animal or fruit.”
      That’s hilarious.
      RE: George and Charlotte… they look ridiculous. They look like stock (archive) footage of kids at the Macy’s Parade in the 50s.

      • ElleBee says:

        I said this last week and someone on here said that they are dressed in timeless clothing. I think they look dated. Pili Carrera for example makes such cute modern clothing that George can wear and still look posh.

        The Cambridges were supposed to modernise the monarchy but they seem so old all the time

      • kaiko says:

        Very true. It’s all about the “look” with these two and the Middletons, not actual substance. This sock/shorts thing does not surprise in the least.

      • Dani says:

        Yes, this exactly!! I have pictures of my father at the same age as George in the 1950’s wearing this exact outfit.

    • bleu_moon says:

      @Clare- M’yeah. You can’t just drop “I spent 80% of my childhood dressed as either some kind of animal or fruit” and not give details. What animal? What kind of fruit?

      • Clare says:

        Haha! Well I grew up in a smallish town in Georgia, so there was a lot of dressing up as different animals for things (we have evidence of dog, cat, turkey, cow, chicken and monkey in a tutu). Before I was old enough for animals, though, I had my little tomato costume that came out to play for every event/party.
        When I was 10 I attended my uncles wedding dressed as a smurf. True story.
        You may think I’m joking, but most of my childhood photos feature me in some kind of insane costume.
        So much so that for my 30th my friends threw me an animal costume theme surprise party haha!

      • Ursaline says:

        Clare,
        I think that’s positively awesome. 🙂 I still dress up with my kids if they let me and I always thought it was a great way to embrace letting your imagination run wild (as long as it’s not too embarrassing). The smurf costume at the wedding story is priceless. 😀

      • Elizabeth says:

        @Clare: I cannot stop laughing. Your childhood seems awesome. And monkey in a tutu & smurf costume at a family wedding -priceless!

    • RedOnTheHead says:

      Clare, thank you for my first laugh of the day!

    • BW says:

      I grew up in England in the 1960s and little boys at my non-posh school wore shorts (knee-pants) and knee socks. It’s practical. When little kids are growing like weeds, they are not likely to outgrow shorts, whereas they will outgrow long pants quickly.

      However, I have no idea what English school uniforms look like nowadays. I do admit, George’s look is very 1950s to me.

  4. Erinn says:

    I think it’s the shorts and socks that bother me most. Some of the time, sure. It could be cute.

    But let the kid wear some slacks occasionally.

    They dress him like he’s supposed to be on one of the cheesy Canadian Heritage Moments PSA commercial things. Kind of like the kid from the Winnie the Pooh one. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlA6oEs3C18

  5. LAK says:

    For me, it’s not so much the outfit as the shoes. G is walking around in brogues!!!!

  6. Jwoolman says:

    He looks fine. Boys wear short pants plenty of times. And yes, they wear long socks also. (So do men.) It’s a practical style and easy for a kid to move freely in. I wonder sometimes where some of you live that you’re so fussy about such simple clothing choices on a three-year old. It’s not like they’re dressing him like poor Nori West.

    • LAK says:

      I shudder every time i see how they dress Nori West.

      Ditto Suri Cruise before Katie bolted.

    • Em' says:

      Who are those boys and men and where are they ? I’ve never ever seen them, except in old pictures or maybe at weddings for the little boys. I hate the long socks thing.

      • Locke Lamora says:

        Yep, me neither. Beut then, I’m not British nor posh. God, this whole family is so annoying.

      • Clare says:

        Basically every old public (private) school uniform in England features shorts and pulled up socks for little boys. It looks comical, but it is very very common in our neck of the woods.

        Agree that this whole family is super annoying.

      • Snowflake says:

        Yeah, I never have seen it either. If you’re a grown person and you wear shorts with long socks, you get laughed at. It looks very old-fashioned. Is it normal for over there? I’m in the US.

      • TyrantDestroyed says:

        If I ever see a grown man dressed in shorts and long socks the last thing I would think is that he looks cute. That theme dressing only seems acceptable to me when you are under 5 and vintage theme dressed. I don’t know how practical would be in cold weather anyway.

    • MinnFinn says:

      The shorts may provide free movement for children, but those little boys must be cold wearing shorts in the winter. Surely the old buildings where the little boys attend prep school are not well insulated and drafty. We are often read that Buckingham Palace is very cold in the winter.

      Parents anywhere in the US would have a hissy fit if their winter school uniform for boys was shorts and not pants. It wouldn’t matter to them that they also wear long sleeve wool blazers and/or sweaters on top.

    • Another Anne says:

      I have two boys. I have never once seen any of their friends wear long socks with shorts. I don’t even know where you’d buy long socks for boys. You see crew length, ankle length or no show.

    • Timbuktu says:

      I have a little boy and plenty of friends with little boys, and I’ve never seen anyone dressed like George. Yes, plenty of boys wear shorts. IN THE SUMMER, not in British or Canadian October. And without the knee highs. Basically, if it’s cold enough for knee highs – they shorts are not weather-appropriate. If it’s warm enough for shorts, why would you want knee highs?

    • Belle Epoch says:

      I think they are keenly aware that all these photos will be archived as The Childhood of the Future King. If my kid wears a Tshirt with an alien on it, no one will care or remember. With these kids, every photo is historic. I don’t know if any citizens care but I bet the Queen does.

      • wolfpup says:

        Kate has been receiving a lot more advice, since the birth of her children. Her own clothing choices have certainly improved. The photograph’s are so interesting – as though, that is the only story-line that they need, in order to accomplish their goal of blue-bloodiness. It seems that the intention is to perceived them as totally entitled to receive all blessings from heaven (or the State). The “just like us” idea has been disappearing, along with Kate’s old, dirty boots, and perhaps, her lack of underwear.

    • kaiko says:

      I care because his little legs looked frozen in some of the pics from their tour, while PW and KM were wearing coats!?

  7. mellie says:

    Maybe she’s trying to dress him a bit like his dad when he was small… I think it’s cute, but I imagine little George will rebel in a few years on the shorts and socks thing (and the crocs!).

  8. Mrs.Lucky says:

    I have a friend who has five boys. They range in age from 13 to 1. Most of the time they are in whatever they have dressed themselves in, running from activity to activity and she is in sweats as she runs them around. However, each of those boys spend everyday of their first year in a half in those little hand sewn seer sucker outfits with twee Mary Jane looking shoes and the next years (until they vocalized they didn’t like or want it) dressed like this. lol She just really loves the style.

    • tschic says:

      I could understand the first year. But a 3 year old? In Germany no boy is dressed like this.
      Shorts are only for hot summer days.
      I don`t think Charlottes clothes are as oldfashioned as Georges. I Like them.

      • trillian says:

        Exactly. I don’t mind the shorts, but when it’s cold enough for everyone else to wear a coat then I would dress my son in long pants.

  9. Aang says:

    The shoes look uncomfortable, stiff. That’s my peeve for kids. They should have soft shoes. I liked the Mary Janes he wore before. The rest of the outfit looks fine. I see kids dressed like that for special occasions all the time. And why would trousers be any better? So he looks like a banker on the weekend? I agree the socks are a bit much.

  10. NOLA says:

    I’m American so maybe some of you can explain this, but doesn’t he get cold?! It was clearly chilly in Canada, yet he was wearing shorts and socks. That’s the part I am confused about.

    • Jwoolman says:

      When I was a kid, girls wore skirts and knee socks. Cold knees and thighs in the winter….

      But I assume the long socks are precisely because it gets chilly in England and certainly in Canada. He really looks normal to me. He’s not digging in a sandbox, he’s on an official state visit. We hardly see the lad, so how can we know how he dresses all the time? But short pants on kids his age are very common everywhere I’ve lived in the US. Styles have always varied in different regions, though. I remember little kids in Philadelphia, both boys and girls, routinely wore long socks, short pants or skirts, and sandals that have several sets of straps. The sandals were new to me, we wore closed shoes except in summer where I lived in the Midwest.

    • Imqrious2 says:

      Nola, my younger nephew always ran “hot”, and still does (he’s 16 now). We would all be bundled up, and he waltzed around in shorts and T shirts, If we tried to force a sweater or long pants, it was a battle royale. It was easier to let him dress for HIS comfort level, and jus shove a sweater in our purses. MY dad also enjoys, what I call, living in a meat locker: I’m in a sweatshirt, sweatpants, thick socks, and he’s in shorts and a T shirt most of the year…. heredity? Go figure 😜

    • Prairiegirl says:

      @NOLA, have a peek at the uniform chart for an exclusive prep/boarding school here in (one of the coldest regions of) Canada. Shorts for boys grade 2 and under are required. http://www.sjr.mb.ca/file/16-17-Uniform-Chart.pdf
      Clothing-as-status is everything!

    • bluhare says:

      George was in Victoria, and while it was not sunny it was not freezing. It was probably in the 60’s.

  11. Seraphina says:

    I’m middle class US and mine wire pants not shorts, especially in the fall. But this is Wlls and Kate, who love the aristocrat life style while believing they are middle class. I need a sharp knitting needle to burst their bubble. 📌🎈

  12. Emily says:

    But is George going to have many suburban/middle class peers?

  13. puffinlunde says:

    The DM’s “etiquette expert” is a huge snob who says the most outrageous stuff in his clickbait articles so I would take anything he says with a huge pinch of salt.

    I think that George and Charlotte are being dressed in traditional clothes for official appearances to give them a more timeless quality that won’t look so dated. They don’t dress him in such formal clothes for private appearances where he often is pictured in jeans/denim. Many Royals seem to do this. The Wessex’s daughter was always dressed in very traditional dresses/coats as well and Princess Estelle wears many of Crown Princess Victorias childhood clothes.

  14. Sullivan says:

    I think he’s adorable. Part of the charm is he’s dressed like Christopher Robin.

  15. Alix says:

    I’m okay with the shorts, it’s the black knee socks that look bizarre to me.

    • bluhare says:

      They’re navy blue.

    • Esmom says:

      To me it seems like old-school European school attire. My dad went to school when he was young in couple different European countries during WWII and this is how he looks in the few photos he has — shorts, long socks, shirt, sweater and sometimes a tie.

  16. Dal says:

    I think it’s cute, if I had the money I would dress my son this way. It’s better than those ridiculous graphic t shirts and sweatpants I see kids wear where I live. Although, he’s still very young and I might think differently when he’s 3.

    • HeyThere! says:

      Agree! The stores sell sweatpants for kids now and hardly any regular slacks or denim!!! My mother (I’m born in the mid 80’s) would have never bought is sweats?! I didn’t own sweats ever?!?! I had pj’s for bedtime. It looks sloppy and weird. And don’t get me started on all the tacky graphic t-shirts with words all over them!!! I go out of my way to buy my sons baby clothes that don’t have phrases or words all over them. I enjoy classic looks, or non-sweatpants and graphic t-shirts, and it’s hard to find else where locally. I shop out of town.

      • kaiko says:

        Funny enough, I don’t really care how my kids look, as long as they are comfortable and can move around easily. This usually means spending more on softer higher quality fabric, ie cotton fleece or twill pants and sometimes sweatpants (gasp!). Not polyester blends or rayon that don’t allow the skin to breathe, which is what a lot of higher end brands are reverting back to strangely, despite their price. Moral here is just because it looks nice doesn’t mean it feels nice, or is made of nice stuff…kind of like with people.

      • nicegirl says:

        HeyThere! Gymboree has amazing clothing for boys, online and at their retail locations. My youngest son has an awesome grandma who is a frequent purchaser and she gets Gymbucks which apply to future purchases – she sends super cute clothing for our son, really nice sweaters, jeans, lined pants, short and long sleeved shirts, vests, fall & spring jackets, holiday wear – and it becomes more affordable the more she buys. She has found fisherman sweaters, lots of shirts with nice, not ugly/garish graphics, and in the end is paying about half of the retail price when ordered online with her Gymbucks. All the teachers ask our son about his clothes, especially the sweaters.

  17. gobo says:

    I think they dress him that way so as to appeal to a nostalgic element, it reminds people of William and Harry as little boys.

    • wolfpup says:

      I do not remember that as a happy time, for Diana, Charles, the Queen, or the Wale’s children.

  18. PHAKSI says:

    Its the long socks that make it veer into caricature for me. The way he was dresses in his recent birthday photos hit the right balance, he was dressed up but he didnt look like he couldve been a playmate for baby Prince Charles

    • kaiko says:

      MTE. It seems that they want his image to be that of a pricey princely caricature in the public domain…and that’s sad. Poor George. Anne did it right. Part of the reason she declined giving her children titles was because she knew their lives would be twisted by the “lady” or “duke” before their first name, and wanted them to grow up without the stigma.

  19. MinnFinn says:

    The winter uniform for Wetherby prep school that William and Harry attended still has the policy wherein the only bottom is shorts and not long pants. That baffles me given London’s winter climate.

    Other than ‘that is their tradition’, can someone explain this history of upper class boys wearing shorts vs long pants during colder weather? Thanks.

    http://www.wetherbyschool.co.uk/About/SchoolUniform/

    • T.Fanty says:

      It’s actually a practice called “breeching” that goes back to the sixteenth century. Boys would wear dresses and live with their mothers in an all-female household until the age of five or six, at which point, they would be “breeched” and go live in their father’s quarters, and start on formal education, and being a MAN. Part of that was, apparently, making into trousers (or at the very least, doublet and hose).

      • adastraperaspera says:

        Interesting, thanks!

      • kaiko says:

        also, in 18th/early19th century europe, only the “working man” such as laborers or farmers would wear full length trousers, not the aristocratic who did not work in any capacity nor even “gentry” that were often doctors, lawyers, scientists, etc. In later years as trousers became more en vogue the aristocracy still wore the breech/hose ensemble in court.

  20. original kay says:

    Minus the shoes and socks, (my son wears deck shoes and just little socks) this is how my son dresses. V neck sweaters, chinos, tailored shorts, button down shirts and polo shirts.
    now, ours are from Old Navy, but they look just as nice. We often buy them end of season at 50% off.

    Never sports related clothes, superhero, etc etc. Just nice colours and patterns and never sweatpants.

    He does own T shirts but only really wears them to the beach (he burns easily).

    So like, some of us just prefer it. Unfortunately, it seems to still matter in our society, how we present ourselves. I dress to drop my kids off, I don’t wear yoga pants or my jammies out, even if I don’t get out of the car.

    Meh

    • Dal says:

      Yes, I think it’s nice to look appropriate.

    • LucyHoneychurch says:

      It sounds like you dress your kid nicely but fwiw I don’t think you’re doing what this article is talking about (shorts with knee socks which yeah, is really uncommon).

    • Tiny Martian says:

      Sounds good to me, original! My mother taught us that we dress for the occasion and out of respect for those around us, not for ourselves, and that’s something that I’ve always taken into consideration.

    • Timbuktu says:

      That was not judgmental at all towards all those who “don’t dress for the occasion”. Reminds me of women who say “I’d never go out without makeup” or “I’d never go out with a pony tail”.
      I really don’t think it’s our society dictating you how to dress your boy. 90% of kids I see at schools are wearing whatever they want, including some very well-adjusted, very smart children I know, not just neglected kids from rough neighborhoods. No one judges them.
      Now, of course, if you like and want to dress nicer, power to you, but on days when kids have P.E., given that in most schools they don’t get to change, I see NO problems with wearing “sports related” clothes or sweatpants. In fact, it makes more sense to me than wearing stiff slacks, a button down shirt and a sweater.

      • tschic says:

        button down shirt for every day? Why?

        My son loved graphics of animals on his shirts. I chose the ones I liked too.
        Why not wear something the kids like and want to wear?
        Wearing boring clothes like the adults do is early enough.

        But – on special occasions the kids can wear something without a print.

  21. dodgy says:

    I remember growing up in the Caribbean, boys wore shorts (be it casual and in the school uniform) until they got into sixth grade, and that’s when you’d start seeing them wearing trousers.

    I do think the style is founded in practicality, in the sense that boys tend to grow like weeds, so to avoid the short hems, you’d just wear shorts and long socks until they got into seventh grade! The boys around my way tend to wear trousers (lower to middle class) because it’s bloody cold over here in England! My grandsons have been wearing long trousers for a LONG time.

    • GingerCrunch says:

      This makes the most sense, historically speaking.

    • ElleBee says:

      I’m from the Caribbean too and in secondary school boys wear shorts from 1st-3rd form (age 12-14) and then long pants in 4th and 5th (15-16) the oldest boys at schools with lower and upper 6th forms wear a different colour long pants (17-18)

  22. LucyHoneychurch says:

    Does that mean he wears shorts and knee socks to his little preschool too? This whole idea of not wanting him to look “suburban” – in other words, middle class – is really gross. His mother is middle class (maybe upper middle but still, not born royal).

    • kaiko says:

      In the grand scheme of things though, we are all the same. Money and power come and go but at the end of the day, we are all mortal. No one is better than the man beside him.

  23. Tiny Martian says:

    I think he looks adorable, and I also think that if they expect him to dress properly as an adult, it’s best to get used to the discomfort of wearing things like real shoes now. I see grown men every day in my neighborhood dressed like toddlers, all in the name of comfort, and I”m guessing it’s because they spent their youth dressed in pull on pants and velcro-closure trainers.

    Whew! Felt good to get that off my chest. 🙂

    • perplexed says:

      Good point!

    • kaiko says:

      This makes no sense at all. My husband wears suits to work and then comes home to pull on sweatpants and crocs. But then puts his chinos on if we have to run errands. Everyone is different! He spent his childhood in hand me downs from older brothers by the way.

  24. NOLA says:

    I think my comment above may be misconstrued. I think he looks fine; and I can see how this look is more formal than, say, a pair of khaki pants. I’m just mystified by the practicality of it from the standpoint of cold weather. But I also had no idea that shorts and long socks was the uniform for the fancy schmancy schools that William and Harry attended. I live in Louisiana – smocked one piece outfits and high socks are the norm for boys 3 & under. But when it gets cold
    here, they switch to Jon-Jon longalls.

    • kaiko says:

      ITA! The shorts and knee socks is the prep or “public school” look in the British sense, of course. And naturally, that is where George is heading in a few years. I just can’t believe as a mom, Kate would not prioritize his physical comfort above his appearance. I think that it’s crazy all these schools make it mandatory. We get that they want their kids to be seen as upper crust, but they are still human children who will get cold in the winter ffs.

  25. Guesting says:

    If I let him get away with it, my son wears long socks with shorts. He says he likes how they stay up and don’t bunch up like his crew or ankle socks. He’ll wear them to school. He’s 7 and doesn’t care about how he looks. I ask and take notice of of the other boys and if they care about what others wear; nope, not a bit. They only care about plant zombies, pretending to be aliens, and getting as dirty as absolutely possible…oh and of course Minecraft!!
    Actually a trend around here is to wear those UnderArmor long athletic socks with everything. My nieces and nephews fight over those socks and they are in Highschool.

  26. Nina says:

    Lols…..Prince George will never look out of place with his peers because, he will be hanging out with aristocratic and the super rich/gigantic estate children. That’s how they all dress their children so none of their offspring will demand to dress otherwise. It’s their normal and they don’t really care for how the rest of the world dress their children. These kids live in palaces and manors lined with paintings of masters, thoroughbred horses, priceless furniture, chandeliers etc and everyone descended from aristocratic families traced centuries back. If you see them in their “natural” surroundings, they look right at home. You put a suburban kid in those aristocratic surroundings and they literally will stand out as common.

    • Starlight says:

      … a bit confused …. how does Princess Anne daughter Zara dress her daughter ?

      • Simone says:

        Zara is a commoner even if she’s the Queen’s granddaughter. Her daughter Mia is basically dressed the same way except when she is on the equestrian field as Zara is an accomplished equestrian and often competes.

  27. LaMaitresse says:

    My mother used to dress my brother and I just like George and Charlotte when we were little, I think it’s a very English manner of dress. Mind you I’m 47, so times have changed, there are more children’s clothes on the market, but it was still different to what Canadian children were wearing. For once, I won’t fault her on the kid’s clothes because I like them, they are so old school English.

  28. Gabrielle says:

    I have a little boy George’s age and I can’t get him to wear anything nice at all. He would look so cute in outfits like this, but he insists in “no buttons” ever! He will only wear sweats and t-shirts. I hope he gets over it by the time it’s time for job interviews.

  29. Kitty says:

    If this is true then Kate should humble herself. She’s the snobby one.

    • wolfpup says:

      It seems that part of being an aristocrat, is that one needs not consider anyone, but one’s own class.

  30. AG-UK says:

    he will be in shorts at school, most private schools and some state schools (primary) do shorts until the end of the year and then go into trousers from Jan onwards then shorts again from spring term.

  31. Cee says:

    My brother was dressed the same way for formal events or photo portaits or whatnot. I was in the typical dress with a coat, ribbons in my hair, socks with frills and black patent shoes.

    But when at home we would wear jeans or whatever. From the pap photos I’ve seen of George with Kate or Carole M. he is dressed differently. This serves 2 purposes: differentiate his official/public from private life, and as some sort of security tactic: he would be hard to spot while wearing non traditional clothes.

  32. Kori says:

    I see this here a lot with European royals. A more formal, even dated, look for engagements and then jeans, etc for private time. The girls even dress similarly or identically. Plus this was no different then William and Harry at the same age in terms of public and private wear. William even had that powder blue formal coat to match Diana when he was little.

  33. Juluho says:

    What’a funny is right now all the boys are into high socks and gym shorts. Alllllllll the boys. It’s like the athletic take on George’s look. I’m not down btw, my son still wears jeans and cargo shorts.
    As for Charlotte’s look, it doesn’t seem out of date. But I’m in the south and most middle/ upper class girls wear smock dresses, and not many girls go without a bow.
    But as a pseudo- southern mom my criticism is that bow is too small. The bigger the now the better the mama 😉

  34. Tina says:

    I don’t really care how they dress George, but Kate is forever trying to hide being middle class. That ridiculous faux posh voice, for starters.

    • wolfpup says:

      Kate has so many years to make herself a part of the aristocracy – let’s not fool ourselves, she already is a part of this class, as a figure- – – red blood transmutes into blue, after a child.

      • Tina says:

        That’s not how it works in the UK. By George and Charlotte’s grandchildren’s time, maybe the Middletons will be part of the aristocracy. Not before.

  35. Starlight says:

    Well I am sure his cousins on Kate’s mothers side at Pipps wedding will be dressed normally – can’t wait

  36. perplexed says:

    I don’t think George will be dressing like this when he’s 13, so I think it’s all good. He’s only 3. I don’t know if fashions for 3 year olds are as solid as they are for 30 year olds. William was a nicely dressed teenager. He’s also a nicely dressed grown-up — clearly, it’s his personality that is the problem. So that’s what William and Kate should be worrying about when it comes to their kids as they continue to grow up!

  37. Abby_J says:

    I remember pictures of Will and Harry as kids, and they pretty much were dressed like George, weren’t they? I just assumed all posh people over there dress their kids like that. I’ve never given their clothes a second thought.

    The shorts and knee socks thing is very popular in certain parts of the south in the US. I have a cousin who dresses her five year old boy like that still. We went to visit my grandmother for Easter, and she bought my kids matching Easter outfits for church. My son is two and she got him a full on Matlock blue Seersucker suit with shorts, knee socks and bowtie. My husband was a bit horrified, but he looked like almost every other kid at church on Easter Sunday, and my grandma was happy.

  38. Nic919 says:

    If the goal is to visit Canada and pretend that as future Kings of Canada they have an actual connection to the country, then they should have dressed him as a Canadian boy with formal trousers. Wearing shorts and emulating a British tradition is just another reminder that this family is foreign and not Canadian and should not be even symbolic heads of state.
    Class divisions are not acceptable in Canada and a significant majority is not interested in tugging their forelocks to a foreign family who doesn’t seem to understand the country they are visiting.

    • tigerlily says:

      Thank you! As a Canadian I am baffled that the class system is still so ingrained in Britain. Everything hinges on an accident of birth: the throne, estates, money. Such a waste.

      As you say, this old fashioned mode of dress just confirms how out of touch and foreign the royals are to Canada.

  39. DiamondRottweiler says:

    I’ll admit, I kinda like that they make an attempt to have the little guy just a bit more formal than is typical these days when he’s out with them doing public events. There’s a kind of reassuring continuity when you think of the pics there’ll be over time of his growing up–much more classic than whatever the current passing fad or cartoon-creature the boys happen to be wearing in a given moment. God bless America, but I regret that we’ve taken “casual” to such a slovenly extreme in this country. I find this little bit of old school formality and style cheering. But maybe it’s just anxiety over the Human Cheeto’s potential election making me nostalgic for a time that never actually existed. Possibly….

    • wolfpup says:

      Human Cheeto is not about nostalgia, but greed. The nostalgia is only about the days when whites were raping (forgive me, colonizing), the world. It seems that poor whites need a reason, not to be called, white trash.

      These simpletons are only a tiny part of of the blue planet’s history.

  40. Somegirl says:

    I dress my 7 month old son like this. He looks cute, and I know I only have so long to dress him in styles I think are cute before he puts his chubby feet down. He doesn’t wear these things every day, but for pictures or to visit grandparents or outings, he does. I honestly don’t see why people are picking apart a toddler’s outfits. There are SO MANY other things to complain about with his parents.

  41. emma says:

    I think it’s a cute look. If you can dress them how you like, do it while you can!

  42. Barbara says:

    I dressed my sons the same way at that age. One of them did not like to wear jeans. He didn’t like the feel of them. I for sure am not wealthy and am on the low end of middleclass.

  43. Chaz says:

    He is a future monarch of Great Britain, of course they aren’t going to be parading him around in a Primark t-shirt that says ‘Too rude for school’ or ‘go big or go home’.

  44. ickythump says:

    Im not concerned about how theyr dressed im a bit annoyed that their “first outing as a family of four” was in canada – when they live here – we barely saw them as a family of three – so whats preventing them doing that here? They obviously think they dont hav to bother making an effort here- dont know whether its arrogance or stupidity – th loyalty and respect of th british public is earned and shoudnt be taken for granted.

  45. Margo S. says:

    So well put. It really does look like he’s in a costume. And I hate that he always looks so angry 🙁 he’s a little boy. He should be laughing and having fun!!!

  46. Velvet Elvis says:

    I know this is a classic look but shorts with knee high socks is just so ridiculous to me no matter how cute people say it is. It’s the 21st century…can’t those things evolve and grow some more material on those legs?

  47. Bess says:

    I’m just upset that they don’t seem to want George’s curls to be free.

  48. Canadian Becks says:

    If everyone thinks George looks like a Little Lord Fauntleroy now, wait until he’s a pageboy at Aunt Pippa’s wedding – and we all know she won’t pass up the chance to have the future king as part of her wedding party.

  49. raincoaster says:

    It was particularly obvious this trip because frankly it’s too cold to wear shorts in Victoria most of September. He was without doubt the only kid at those occasions dressed in shorts.

  50. Sunshine Gold says:

    You know, some toddlers these days wear Nirvana t shirts and camo pants and fedoras. That’s not my style either, but to each his own. I fully support parents dressing their children however they choose.

  51. I raised my son in California and he wore shorts and long stockings until he started school, I still like the look.

  52. Her Indoors says:

    20 years ago I dressed my son like this for formal occasions. My husband and his brother did too as children.
    The rest of the time it was trousers, etc.
    I still think it looks adorable. I am British though.

  53. manta says:

    Maybe because I was raised with many kids from posh families dressed the same way, I don’t see the huge deal about what he’s wearing. The BCBG (bon chic bon genre=preppy type) parents I know dressed their children like that 30 years ago, still do it in 2016.

    We used to call them the Cyrillus/Jacadi army because that’s where their clothes come from, the Figaro magazine (paper for conservatives in France) come to life, even with culottes for grown girls. And I think that the bare legs at any age come from the boy scout tradition. They know that sets them apart and that people notice it. They’re thrilled to be different from the plebs.

  54. Thurry says:

    ” ‘Suburban Peasant’ ” — I love that term, I never heard it before, and it cracks me up! Like when somebody (not a Celebitchy writer, I think it was Gawker) described Chico’s brand clothing and accessories for older women as “Neo-Frump.”

    • Starlight says:

      Wasn’t that the same etiquette writer who said Wills should stop putting his hands in his pockets and stop looking like an estate agent and Kate should stop calling him Babe because that was naf as well

  55. jane says:

    George looked silly in those stupid shorts. he has knock knees he didn’t look royal at all!! Kate the shopaholic shops for herself alone . George and Charlotte’s looked unappealing!

  56. NeoCleo says:

    Little boys get over being dressed by their mothers pretty young. I can’t fault Kate for wanting to dress him “cute” while she can get away with it. Very soon Master George will be dictating what he will and won’t wear. Fortunately she still has Charlotte to dress up for a few more years.