Princess Kate designed her ‘bespoke’ blue tartan coat in Scotland this week

When the Prince and Princess of Wales visited Scotland on Tuesday, I got a detail wrong about Kate. I said that she repeated a coat we had seen before. That is incorrect, although to be fair, Kate has a million blue coats and I was making an educated guess that this was a coat we had seen before. Plus, it had such a familiar vibe. As it turns out, it was a newly made coat, designed BY Kate, and she selected/designed the blue tartan fabric and everything. From the Telegraph’s Style section:

‘The Princess of Wales turns fashion designer’ was not a line I ever expected to write. And yet following Catherine’s visit to Scotland on Tuesday, Kensington Palace confirmed that the Princess had worked with Johnstons of Elgin to design the tartan-like fabric of her bespoke Chris Kerr coat, an exercise in showing her support for British textiles and design.

Such visible royal backing for a label so resolutely British (Johnstons has a royal warrant from the King and has been making in Scotland for over 200 years) will be welcomed by the UK’s fashion and manufacturing community, which is as up against it as ever with looming threats of extra tariffs and rising costs. But it also speaks volumes about how far Catherine’s own relationship with fashion has come and the newfound confidence she has to harness her vast influence.

For a long time, there was a sense that any association with fashion was almost painful to the Princess. She was so keen not to be seen as a Diana-esque fashion plate that bland skinny jeans and nude heels were the general order, despite women around the world being eager to emulate her style and some statisticians estimating “the Kate effect” could boost the fashion industry by £1 billion a year. Some fashion editors privately groaned about her “boring” choices.

This week’s coat design feels like the culmination of a year in which Catherine has sought to carve out her own way of engaging with fashion, an approach where she can use her clout to be supportive in a more profound way. The fact that two of her favourite British labels, Cefinn and Eponine, have recently announced their imminent closure, may only have added a sense of urgency to that mission.

Indeed, by co-designing the fabric of her coat, the Princess brought extra meaning and substance to her visit, which included an engagement at Radical Weavers, a Stirling-based studio and charity which promotes tartan weaving. A perfect example of fashion working in tandem with the wider work rather than detracting attention. To underline the Made in Britain message, the fabric was made up into a coat by Soho tailor Chris Kerr, known for his use of traditional techniques. Catherine also wore a kilt from Johnstons collaboration with young Scottish label Le Kilt, a traditional but directional design which could easily be part of Claudia Winkleman’s Traitors wardrobe.

[From The Telegraph]

They also point out that Miracle Kate is doing all of this fashion designing and fabric designing by herself, without a stylist to help her. As far as anyone knows, she hasn’t had any dedicated or even part-time stylist since Natasha Archer suddenly quit last year. Do we honestly believe that Kate is getting zero style “help” since Archer’s departure though? While I believe we would have heard about it if Kate hired a real stylist, I also believe that Kate and William are overstaffed at Kensington Palace, so Kate probably has some personal assistant-type making a lot of these arrangements. As for Kate making this extra effort to own another blue coat which she “designed” – it’s fine. QEII had one-of-a-kind pieces made and designed by Angela Kelly and Camilla uses Fiona Clare as her personal couturier as well, so I’m sure this is considered part of Kate’s queen-in-training stuff. You’d think that if Kate had this made specifically for her, the tailoring would be a lot better?

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

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69 Responses to “Princess Kate designed her ‘bespoke’ blue tartan coat in Scotland this week”

  1. Blujfly says:

    And what did she pay for all this special treatment? Or were they all paid in exposure? She is such a prim narcissist – she didn’t even speak about the coat, the design process, film anything about the procedures yet we are told – never shown – this supports British textiles.

    • Sylindria says:

      My husband used to work in the Furniture Industry for a firm who held a Royal Warrant. He said to get one you have to supply the Royal Family/Household for free for five years and then you have to keep doing it to retain one. It’s why a lot of British Firms don’t have one because it can be a LOT of outlay. He said he knew of at least two firms it drove into the red.

  2. wolfmamma says:

    Her clothes are fairly dreadful overall. I’d not be bragging about this or any of them.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I think it’s rather notable that the ONE time Kate takes off her coat inside it’s the coat that she ‘designed’ herself–it’s so ugly & uncomfortable even she couldn’t keep it on. Probably too heavy on her bony little shoulders.

  3. I don’t believe that she designed this by herself. She may have said she wanted a certain color and left it to someone else to “design”. It’s pretty basic in my opinion for a tartan pattern.

    • Becks1 says:

      This is what I think. I think she told Johnston’s she wanted a blue and gray muted plaid (is that gray? I cant quite tell) and then told Kerr to make it look like all her other long blue coats. Its nice but she’s far from a fashion designer.

      • Eurydice says:

        Sure, it’s all lines and squares on the computer – you just keep shifting colors and intervals until you get something you like. It’s nice that she designed a coat to her taste, but that’s not fashion design.

      • sunniside up says:

        I think the tartan is OK, but could be more interesting. I like the style of the coat apart from the elastic at the sides, darting would have been better, could have been done in the centre of each square, so as not to spoil the pattern to much but I do think that the length suits her.

      • Eurydice says:

        @sunniside up – Yes, you can see in the swatches on the wall that they all have lines of some contrast to brighten and add some interest.

      • Christine says:

        The elastic at the sides makes me think of those inserts you can use to make toddler pants stay up on skinny kids, and really. It’s not at all a stretch to imagine that they have to use something similar on all of her clothes. I have no idea how this isn’t a discussion, since the last Princess of Wales had a very well documented eating disorder, and this one is skinnier than the last.

    • StillDouchesOfCambridge says:

      It’s always half truth: she designed it because she chose the fabric – something something about the old fabrics shelearned about last year. But also, very fishy, they recently spoke about the designer’s clad nda’s to sign, the royal warrants she can sign off on now, she doesnt care about fashion, but she’s a timeless fashion icon and now she designs her coats. She’s up to something 💯.

  4. KC says:

    Picking out fabric and a coat pattern and then getting someone else to make it is not designing anything. The level of breathlessness for doing a thing any functioning adult (or child over the age of maybe 7) can do is an all time high. I hurt myself I rolled my eyes so hard.

  5. Dee says:

    Did she design those awful elastic sides, too? And those halfback shoulder pads?

  6. Steph says:

    Did she design the coat or the fabric?

  7. Kittenmom says:

    The fabric isn’t bad but I think it would look better as a shorter coat or jacket. I don’t think she makes this coat look good at all.

  8. Lala11_7 says:

    Too easy 😬😲😐

  9. Jais says:

    Sorry. I’m just laughing at the description of her “newfound confidence” in fashion. Really??? It’s been over a decade now and all of the sudden there’s this newfound confidence. Okaaay, sure, whatever. Promoting the textile industry is a pretty normal thing that she should be doing. And she is. So cool. But calling it newfound confidence is asinine and childish.

    • Unblinkered says:

      Shockingly, it’s a lot more than a decade that we’ve endured KM – it’s over 15 years. They got engaged Nov 2010 and she commenced ‘engagements’ then, so she’s had 15 years to gain confidence, interests, you name it.
      It irritates me just typing that!

  10. YankeeDoodles says:

    What did she “design”? The fact it has sleeves? LOL. A lapel? A hem? Buttons? It’s a pretty standard-issue coat-dress. I think your average 10-year-old, if asked, could “design” something equivalent. The quest to attribute accomplishments of any kind to this woman is reaching parody proportions. She drives! Call the news stations. She attends a ballet! All hail Kween Consort. I mean…. Ok. It’s become clear that what triggered Kate about Meghan was that Meghan had actual accomplishments. I used to work on a tv show and it takes minimum 12 hours per day, that is the standard actors’ union contract. I wasn’t an actor, my days were longer!! There is a lot to be said for getting up in the morning and just earning enough money to pay your own bills. Kate never did that. She’s a walking advertisement for feminism, as a counterfactual.

  11. Jane says:

    Johnstons make some beautiful stuff, way out of my price range, but she’s a lucky duck to get this for free. Although I don’t like it it will have been beautifully crafted with quality fabric. She hardly looks decent in anything though, no matter how well made.

  12. Lucy says:

    Sorry, I couldn’t read past the part where they claimed she didn’t want to be known for fashion like Diana. Half her outfits up until Meghan were straight Diana copies. Like fully.

    • Moondust says:

      Yes. She copied Jenna Craig ́s style too. And now apparently she’s the new Victoria Beckham 🤭

    • Christine says:

      Yes, there are so many examples of straight copying from Diana. Look no further than the dress she wore after Charlotte was born. She fully looked up what Diana wore when she left the hospital with Harry, it’s disturbing.

    • Dee says:

      Even her wedding gown was a copy. Princess Margaret’s dress with lace sleeves. The overall structure and even the boob darts were copied. She has not one original thought when it comes to fashion.

  13. Fifee says:

    This looks like she visited an Edinburgh Woolen Mill shop, picked a random blue ‘tartan’ blanket and said ‘let’s be having a coat please!’ It’s an incredibly basic pattern and I can well imagine Kate ‘designing’ it. Plenty of tartans to choose from, especially hers and Willie’s Strathearn tartan but no she makes this dull mess.

    • Caitlin says:

      Yes – it reminded me of a blanket when I saw it. Would look good draped across the back of a couch or maybe in the back seat of the car to keep the dog warm.

  14. Me at home says:

    Guessing this company sent several plaid samples over, she picked one, and that was her “contribution” to the design process. That said, I like the plaid, although it’s not a tartan in the traditional sense. Each clan has its own tartan, and often a hunting tartan (more muted) too. She probably felt she couldn’t wear, say, Clan Murray tartan and snub all the other clans, which is fair. But there is an actual Prince of Wales tartan that would seem to have fit the bill, oh well.

    As far as the tailoring goes, it’s impossible to know what’s going on with the pad stitching etc. inside the coat, and that might have been done in the traditional Savile Row manner like they say here. The exterior design is certainly traditional–in the most boring way possible. I’m a really good seamstress, and I’ve even taken bespoke tailoring classes online because it’s “fun” to me (my day job is nerdy, too). Kate has a coat by an Italian designer that has curved, half-moon besom pockets, and I totally covet that coat and want to try to replicate it some day. This coat was not that.

    • Me at home says:

      Also, she’s figured out a way to get new clothes by saying it’s all about “highlighting British textiles” instead of about “Kate the clothes horse.” Smart, and noted.

      • Becks1 says:

        Meghan wore the Prince of wales plaid once (in a boatneck sweater, a great look on her.) For as much of a copykate as she is, she may be worried about such a direct comparison.

    • Bqm says:

      There are (Bowes) Lyon or Moray (Murray) tartans which could’ve been an out of the box nod to heritage too. (Diana’s heritage is the latter.)

  15. Polo says:

    This looks like every other coat she has worn. What is there to design besides picking out a color?
    I don’t believe the Telegraph..I think they are widely exaggerating her contributions to this but I’m glad they at least mentioned the failing companies of Kate’s favorite brands.

  16. Jennifer says:

    I love this. Very cool to shine a light on talented weavers.

  17. Diamond Rottweiler says:

    What I see of “her design “ is horizontal line pattern, padded & puffed shoulders, wide lapel peaked collar, double breasted w/ pockets AND weird elastic all set prominently at her waist—this is the coat you design for someone profoundly underweight. It is, as many have noted, pretty alarming at this point. She’s not someone for whom I have much sympathy, but Jesus, doesn’t she have family to try to help her? Or maybe they have. But it’s sad to see.

  18. E says:

    I will never understand why she is allergic to giving credit to and thereby celebrating the professionals who do the real work behind the scenes. See also doing her own makeup for the wedding.

  19. Jennifer Smith says:

    I know this is not the point, but it makes me crazy the way she holds her fingers together in any shot where she’s not jazz handing. She’s always always always doing either that or putting a hand on her midsection.

  20. Minerva says:

    Honestly not a terrible coat for her, I mean, serious lack of buttons.

    I would be more interested in ICE Barbie being picked apart for her fake hair, god awful make up and theme dressing the same way Kate is.

  21. jazzbaby1 says:

    In the header photo, WOW does she look like her mother.

    • fwiw says:

      @JazzBaby1. I could tell she looks different in that picture, & not in a good way. The smile makes her face very round & the blusher more apparent on pale skin. Also, as others have pointed out, her teeth seem too big for her mouth. They were probably done when before she stopped eating. Happier may be out of reach, but I wish she could be healthier.

  22. sunniside up says:

    See the huge crowds that turned up for our future Queen.

  23. QuiteContrary says:

    So she said, “Please add elastic, so I can accentuate my extreme thinness,” and she called it a day.

  24. Amy Bee says:

    I think Kate’s become very predictable when it comes to fashion. If she’s not wearing a pants suit, she’s wearing a long coat and skirt and a cape dress for evening wear. Her fashion is very boring.

  25. Jan says:

    There is a picture of unable wearing this coat in brown a few years ago.

    • Blubellah says:

      That brown version looks identical to this one. Even down to the gathered waist.
      She just copied the style and print in a different color.

  26. BLACK ELDERBERRY says:

    I’ve never seen a bigger loser than this lazy, empty-headed girl. Even the dumbest person has something they can do well, responsibilities, and friends, even if they’re just beer-soaked drunks.

    And Kate Middleton has NOTHING. Trying to make her into a virtuoso, photographer, cook, athlete, fashion designer, or interior designer won’t help when the music is playing on playback, she can’t hold a camera or a frying pan, they never show her playing, only posed photos with a ball, and every outfit is a copy with terrible accessories. She acts like she’s deficient in development. The only thing she focuses on in life is sticking her bare butt out the window—first, then on international state visits—and acting as a mattress for aristocrats. Middleton’s obsession with the crown isn’t about the need for power. It’s about being a Disney princess, being Barbie in a wig, crown, and glitter in a shop window. At the last official banquet, in a tacky brocade gown/cape, she quite deliberately donned a tiara that looked like a crown and paraded around in it with a demented expression, imitating the queen. Recently, she wore the same expression as she looked at Trump, who was sitting next to her. She was so drooling that I wondered if Trump hadn’t consummated their relationship in some corner of the palace.

    She’s a woman, single-minded in her purpose, who goes like a battering ram, destroying every obstacle and every person who comes in, using every method available to her. Unfortunately, William is the same way.

  27. BeanieBean says:

    Y’all! The reason she was a crappy dresser from the get-go is because she didn’t want to be like Diana! 🤣🤣🤣🙄. Oh, that is rich!!!

  28. Kim says:

    I find it really hard to believe that any tailor worth his/her salt would craft a coat at this (likely) high price point using elastic at the waist in this manner; elastic is hardly a high-end choice here. Why not a belt to cinch the waist? I have a beautiful plaid wool coat like this and it has a leather backed belt. Was the elastic Kate’s contribution to the “design”?

  29. LRB says:

    Make me a coat, but can you make it two sizes too big???? I would love to have a bespoke piece made for me, but if I did, I would have it fit like a glove not a sack.

  30. tamsin says:

    It’s rather sad when you dither over choosing a colour to weave into an unfinished cloth that means something to you. Also, Kate majored in art history- shouldn’t she know something about color and how it works? Is there really nothing in this woman?

    The gathering at the coat is really in an odd place. Normally wouldn’t they be used to create a nipping in the waist effect? The gathering is floating in some Netherland between her bustling and her waist. Then the pockets are placed at the waistline. I think the purpose is to make her legs proportionally longer because she appears to be long waisted. Anyway, it looks just odd, and certainly very Kate like, so it makes it a one-of I imagine. If the coat were shorter and styled with a pair of killer high boots, it could make Kate look great. She has the height to carry that off, and the coat would hide her thinness. People would be looking at the over-all effect and not be thinking about the stick underneath the coat.

    • BLACK ELDERBERRY says:

      The claim that “Kate majored in art history” sounds like an oxymoron. Her knowledge, or rather lack thereof, and her statements about art only prove that the only thing she “studied” was chasing aristocrats.

      If William, who didn’t read books—as he himself admits—and was too lazy to show up to classes, got his diploma, then Carole Middleton, who constantly cited royal connections, was also able to arrange it for Kate. One of the now-retired professors, indignantly stated that before every grading session, there was a call from the palace to raise William’s grades, because it was inappropriate for the future king to have the lowest grades in the year. Their “study” was so intense that they couldn’t string a single sentence together, and the request to choose a thread color nearly sent Kate into hysterics. She declared she couldn’t do it and wanted the group to support her. If she doesn’t have something staged and then retouched and edited, she is helpless in the simplest actions or responses.

    • Me at home says:

      The gathering is super high on the coat, at her rib cage. That’s how Kate likes coat waistlines, because it makes her legs look longer. Look at any one of her coat dresses and you’ll see a self-fabric waistband at the same place. I guess she decided the usual high, thin waistband would look weird in plaid, and a belt that high would look very strange, so here we are with the elastic.

  31. Emf999 says:

    Good lord, I thought the main photo was her mother for a second.

  32. dee says:

    Do we know when Kate first started wearing tartan coats? Because all I can think of is Meghan’s gorgeous Burberry tartan coat when she stepped out in February 2018. Everything Kate has worn ever since looks like a cheap knockoff of that moment.

  33. Anare says:

    Kate’s coat could be bought just about anywhere. Seriously, just Google plaid reefer style coat and click on the color you want. LOL! Nothing “designed” about it. The dorky side elastic is howling funny. Way to make that coat look cheap AF! At least the plaid lines match up and are properly spaced so whomever cut and sewed it did their job.

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