The secret ways Meghan Markle alters her clothes to flash MORE flesh & how it’s the opposite tailoring to Princess Kate
A fashion expert has revealed how Princess Kate tends to tweak clothes to be more modest, but that isn’t always the case for Meghan.
Fashion editor Amber Graafland, who has 25 years experience in the industry, told Fabulous: “While their individual styles are unique, one thing they do share is a penchant for altering existing clothing items.
“Kate Middleton is unquestionably the master of this, often altering clothes to make them look more modest, and in line with royal protocol.
“This clever up-cycling of gowns allows her to make more sustainable and appropriate fashion choices, and she’s become very adept at it.”
Meghan too has altered clothes to be less revealing, but appears to be making the most of her new-found freedom having stepped back as a senior working royal.
Amber added: “While Meghan isn’t averse to making outfits more modest, she deployed this technique for her royal tour of Australia by sewing up two rather revealing side slits on a Veronica Beard dress, the restrictions on what she can and can’t wear are far less rigid these days.
“Take the red Carlina Herrera gown that she altered for the LA Children’s Hospital Gala earlier this year.
“First debuted in 2021, the gown originally consisted of a bandeau style dress fitted with a flowing overskirt.
“Meghan upcycled the dress by removing the overskirt to reveal the figure-hugging silhouette underneath.
“This clever tweak transformed the gown from a conservative style to one exuding red carpet-worthy glamour.
“Now that Meghan is no longer restricted by royal protocol, she doesn’t have to watch her necklines or her hemlines.
“While Kate’s seamstress is busy making sure her clothes don’t ever reveal too much, Meghan only has to worry about looking her best and maximising her camera angles.”
We previously saw Kate tweak a gold sequinned Jenny Packham gown – her iconic look for the premiere of James Bond’s No Time to Die in 2021 – where the neckline was altered to make it less revealing.
Another example was an Elie Saab panelled gown, worn to the wedding of Crown Prince Al-Hussein and Rajwa Al Saif in Jordan, where sheer panels were replaced with opaque fabric to make it more modest.
Meanwhile, an Alexander McQueen gown, first worn to the Baftas in 2017, that was modified with sleeves for a gala at the National Portrait gallery two years later.