By Caroline Leaper The King and Queen welcomed Japan's Emperor Naruhito and his wife Empress Masako in style for a state banquet at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday night. With the Palace decked in peonies and sweet peas, guests including Sir Keir Starmer, Lord Cameron, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak filed in. The night's dress code blended white tie with summer colour – a mix of ballgowns and kimonos.
READ MORE: Princess Charlotte is 'overprotective' of mum Kate during treatment A micro-trend of the evening was capes: Kemi Badenoch, the Business Secretary, and Lady Victoria Starmer wore black and white cloaked dresses, respectively. The Empress wore a white lace floor-length gown with cropped sleeves. But it was Queen Camilla's look that was perhaps the most loaded with meaning – she honoured a now decades-old tradition of diplomatically nodding to her guests via her sartorial choices.
She wore a white embroidered silk crepe gown by Fiona Clare, one of her go-to British couturiers and carried a silver clutch bag. She also wore the Burmese Ruby Tiara – a piece she has worn once before, in November 2023. The tiara has a beautiful and personal story; it was one of just two tiaras that Queen Elizabeth II designed for herself.
READ MORE: Kate's long absence proves women are monarchy's backbone In 1973, the late Queen commissioned Garrard to dismantle two wedding gifts she had received asking that they be turned into the one magnificent pi.