Tag Archives: earrings

Erika Jayne fires back at Jon Hamm after he weighed in on earrings controversy and called on her to return jew – Daily Mail

  1. Erika Jayne fires back at Jon Hamm after he weighed in on earrings controversy and called on her to return jew Daily Mail
  2. Erika Jayne says ‘f–k you’ to Jon Hamm after he urged her to return $750K earrings Page Six
  3. RHOBH’s Erika Jayne Tells Jon Hamm ‘F—k You’ After He Called Her Out Over $750k Earrings Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Erika Jayne Slams Jon Hamm for Making Comments About Her $750K Earrings 1 Year Later: Watch HollywoodLife
  5. Erika Jayne Reacts to Jon Hamm Calling Her Out Over Her Expensive Earrings Just Jared
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Kate Middleton wears earrings given to her by grieving mother whose daughter tragically took her own life aged 17 – as she hosts youth mental health forum with William – Daily Mail

  1. Kate Middleton wears earrings given to her by grieving mother whose daughter tragically took her own life aged 17 – as she hosts youth mental health forum with William Daily Mail
  2. Kate Middleton and Prince William’s Mental Health Survey Finds Most Young People Fear for Their Friends PEOPLE
  3. Princess Kate pays moving tribute to friend’s late daughter with deeply sentimental accessory HELLO!
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Princess of Wales wore the Queen’s delicate earrings to Buckingham Palace

The Princess of Wales last night paid tribute to the Queen by wearing a pair of her earrings, it is believed. 

Kate, 40, donned a simple pair of pearl and diamond earrings as she joined her husband Prince William and other senior royals including King Charles, the Queen Consort and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, to receive the Queen’s coffin at Buckingham Palace. 

The earrings are believed to be an elegant pair the Princess has worn on a number of previous occasions, including the day she left hospital after the birth of Prince Louis. 

Kate also chose them for a day of engagements in The Netherlands in 2016, her first official solo overseas visit without Prince William.

It is believed they previously belonged to the Queen with Her Majesty wearing them to a number of events over the years. 

The Queen is known for being generous with her private jewellery collection and has passed on tiaras, earrings and necklaces to members of her family. 

Kate, 40, donned a simple pair of pearl and diamond earrings as she joined her husband Prince William and other senior royals including King Charles, the Queen Consort and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, to receive the Queen’s coffin at Buckingham Palace. It is believed they previously belonged to the Queen with Her Majesty wearing them to a number of events over the years. Pictured, the Queen wearing the earrings in 1977 (left) and the Princess of Wales last night (right)

The Princess of Wales also wore a string of pearls – an unusual choice of jewellery for Her Royal Highness which has been interpreted by royal fans as a nod to the Queen, who was rarely seen without hers. 

Arseiny Budrevich, founder of Budrevich Fine Jewellery Studio, told Express.co.uk that royals, notably Queen Elizabeth, loved pearls because they ‘represent the aristocratic virtues of liberality, magnificence and generosity’, and they ‘symbolise purity and chastity’. 

‘Pearls have been associated with class, elegance and sophistication since the Ptolemaic dynasty in ancient Egypt, where the Royal Family wore pearls to show their status,’ he added.

‘This tradition was then passed down through the holy Roman empire to the French monarchs who carried it into fashion in the middle ages, where it was subsequently dispersed through Europe. This is when the British empire picked up the style.’

Today the Prince and Princess of Wales will join senior royals in paying tribute to the Queen at the funeral procession through central London.  

The Princess of Wales also wore a string of pearls – an unusual choice of jewellery for Her Royal Highness which has been interpreted by royal fans as a nod to the Queen, who was rarely seen without hers 

The Queen was rarely seen without her pearls, prompting royal fans to believe Kate was paying tribute with her jewellery. Pictured, the Queen with her pearls in 2011 (left) and in 2017 (right)

The King was photographed arriving at the palace after leaving Clarence House, hours before Prince William and Prince Harry will set aside their feud and support their father by marching with him behind the coffin.

The royal family will accompany their matriarch on foot on the journey to Westminster Hall this afternoon where hundreds of thousands of people are expected to pay their respects after queueing for hours.

Charles, the Prince of Wales and Duke of Sussex, along with the Duke of York, the Princess Royal and the Earl of Wessex, will form part of the procession. Anne’s son Peter Phillips and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence will also walk behind the procession, as well as the Duke of Gloucester and the Earl of Snowdon.

The Queen Consort, the Princess of Wales, the Countess of Wessex and the Duchess of Sussex will travel by car. The procession will leave the palace at 2.22pm and is expected to arrive at Westminster Hall at 3pm.

King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla arriving at Buckingham Palace last night, ahead of receiving the Queen’s coffin

The car carrying Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex driving towards Buckingham Palace

Her Majesty spent her final night in the Bow Room of Buckingham Palace before she is conveyed on a gun carriage to Westminster Hall – the ancient heart of Parliament – where she will lie in state for four days until her funeral on Monday.

More than 1million people are expected to queue in central London for up to 35 hours to walk past her casket – but experts believe only 400,000 will make it inside meaning 600,000 people will be left disappointed.

The Queen arrived at Buckingham Palace last night to tears and cheers from the huge crowds who stood in the pouring rain to welcome her home after her death at Balmoral last Thursday. The route from RAF Northolt to the palace was packed. There was a wave of lights as many raised their mobile phones in the air to film the hearse as it passed.

As the hearse drove through the gates, Charles could be seen bowing his head with Harry and Meghan stood solemnly behind the monarch.

At 2.22pm exactly this afternoon, the Queen’s coffin will be placed on a gun carriage and lead a procession down a packed Mall, along Whitehall and then into Parliament Square before entering the Palace of Westminster followed by her son, the new King, and her children and grandchildren.

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Facial reconstruction shows powerful Bronze Age woman’s serene expression and huge earrings

A “powerful, maybe even frightening” woman buried with a silver diadem in Bronze Age Spain now has a virtually reconstructed face that shows her wearing a serene expression and huge hoop earrings dangling from earplugs.

Earlier this year, researchers announced they had discovered the woman’s and a man’s remains interred together in a large ceramic pot buried in what was likely an ancient palace. The man had died a few years before the woman; after she died at a later date, someone reopened the pot and placed her body next to his. Now, using the partial skull and jewelry from the burial, a scientific Illustrator has digitally recreated the woman’s face, as well as the faces of others buried at the site, known as La Almoloya.

“The biggest challenge about this facial reconstruction was that the upper portion of her skull did not survive the ages,” Joana Bruno, ​​the freelance scientific illustrator who created the digital reconstructions and a collaborator with the La Almoloya archaeologists at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, told Live Science in an email. “Luckily, the diadem (the silver crown) was found in place, around her head, so that gives us some measure for her head, but it was still a challenge.”

Related: 6 times that showed us women from antiquity were totally badass

The diadem-wearing woman’s identity has intrigued scientists since archaeologists unearthed her burial in 2014. Her lavish burial goods — including the diadem, beaded necklaces, silver-crafted rings, bracelets, spiral hairpieces and earplugs with spirals, as well as a silver-rimmed drinking pot and silver-handled awl, a tool used to piece textiles — are of superior quality and are more valuable than goods buried with the man, researchers previously told Live Science. Perhaps these riches indicate that the woman had more power than her burial partner, especially given that she outlived him and was still buried with treasured goods, the researchers said at the time.

When Bruno decided to digitally recreate the woman’s face, it was in part due to the site’s impressive preservation of many of its original inhabitants. “La Almoloya is just a fascinating time capsule,” she said. “And, since the DNA can tell us more about their kinship, it is also an opportunity to see if these faces somehow carry similar features that could hint at those shared relationships.”

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Twelve digitally reconstructed faces in profile from La Almoloya and La Bastida. (Image credit: Copyright Joana Bruno/ASOME/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
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A digital image of one of the facial reconstructions in process. (Image credit: Copyright Joana Bruno/ASOME/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
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A skull is laser scanned so that it can inform a digital facial reconstruction. (Image credit: Copyright Joana Bruno/ASOME/Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

Before any virtual reconstruction, anthropologists clean, stabilize and study the deceased’s skeleton to determine the person’s sex, age of death, general health and other characteristics. “This information is always taken into account when producing the face reconstruction,” Bruno said. In the Bronze Age woman’s case, she died between the ages of 25 to 30 years old and had several congenital conditions, including a missing neck vertebra and rib.

Next, Bruno takes specific measurements of the skull and does a laser scan of the skull and lower jaw. “The laser scan allows me to work with a digital replica of the original and minimize the manipulation of the bones, which are fragile objects,” she said. Later, to “flesh out” the face, Bruno relies on published techniques for the speculative process of estimating the position of facial features, such as the eyes, nose and mouth, and determining the thickness of the tissues, she said.

“By doing this, I start ‘mapping out’ the surface of the skin and, layer by layer, a face starts to emerge,” Brunos said. However, she did have to make some guesses. To clarify which bones did not survive, Bruno rendered them as gray and transparent in a video showing the reconstruction process.

“The earlobes were a more straightforward decision,” Bruno said. “The earplugs you see in the face reconstruction were found in her tomb, one on each side of her skull. I used laser scans of the earplugs and the diadem in the face reconstruction.”

The remains of the diadem-wearing woman (right) and a male (left) were buried together during the Bronze Age in La Almoloya. (Image credit: ©ASOME-UAB)

The entire process and Bruno’s collaboration with anthropologists highlights “the ability to estimate and ‘rebuild’ missing skeletal portions with the highest possible accuracy and without damaging the original,” Cristina Rihuete Herrada, a professor of archaeology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona and a co-researcher of the 2021 study, told Live Science in an email. “Thanks to the 3D laser scanning of the jewels, Joana has been able to show us that woman’s stunning shimmering look.”

Bruno is now creating archaeological reconstructions of other El Argar people from La Almoloya “using the faces I reconstructed from their skulls, and including the information generated by the archaeological and genetic research,” she said. “It is important to be aware that these bones we now see were real people, with their own domestic dramas, who laughed when someone told a joke, who cared for loved ones and lived in a very different world from our own.”

Originally published on Live Science.

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Meghan Markle accused of wearing Saudi leader’s ‘blood money’ earrings after Khashoggi death

Meghan Markle has been accused of wearing “blood money” earrings gifted by the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on two separate official occasions. 

Markle wore the earrings — initially a gift to Queen Elizabeth — at a state dinner in Fiji during a royal tour that included Tonga, Australia and New Zealand in October 2018, just three weeks after Washington Post writer Jamal Khashoggi was murdered in Saudi Arabia. The U.S. has accused the crown prince of ordering Khashoggi’s death.

“Those earrings were bought with blood money and given to her by a murderer,” Michael Eisner, a lawyer fighting for justice for Khashoggi, said, according to The Daily Mail. “She has no business wearing them.”

“Those earrings were bought with blood money and given to her by a murderer. She has no business wearing them.”

— Michael Eisner, lawyer fighting for justice for Khashoggi

The crown prince reportedly gave the chandelier earrings to the queen as an official wedding gift during a lunch at Buckingham Palace in March 2018. There is no evidence Markle met him at the time or has met him.

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Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, wears earrings from Saudi Arabia’s leader on Nov. 14, 2018 in London. (Getty Images)

Markle’s lawyers have insisted she wasn’t aware of the Saudi prince’s connection to the murder at the time, but a source told the Telegraph she had been advised by aides not to wear the earrings. Also, every article of clothing and piece of jewelry are generally meticulously picked out for a royal tour.

The story had been all over the media at the time.

“Members of Royal Household staff sometimes advise people on their options,” a source told The Telegraph. “But what they choose to do with that advice is a very different matter.”

And while it’s customary for royals to accept gifts,  “Nowhere in the gift policy does it say you have to wear them,” a source told the Daily Mail. 

Markle wore the earrings for a second time a month later at Prince Charles’ 70th birthday party at Buckingham Palace.

Prince Harry reportedly looked “shocked” when an aide approached him at the party about the earrings, according to The Telegraph.

The Kensington Palace staff told reporters at the time the earrings had been “borrowed” but did not elaborate, according to The Telegraph.

Eisner is the chief operating officer of Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), which was founded by Khashoggi. 

“She should inform herself as a member of the Royal Family of current events and politics and what’s going on,” Eisner said, according to the Daily Mail. He noted she had been photogrpahed two years before alongside a Saudi women’s rights activist. “It’s baffling that she would not know the circumstances surrounding Khashoggi’s murder and understand that MBS had blood on his hands.” 

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Markle has been defended by some over the timing of the criticism – three years later – and argued her criticism is “racist” and “sexist” as many politicians have not forcefully spoken out against the crown prince. 

The reports have come out right before her highly publicized interview with Oprah Winfrey, scheduled to air Sunday night. 

Others have noted Markle’s earrings and other scandals pale in comparison to the sexual misconduct accusations launched against Prince Andrew. 

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