Tudor Fashion
In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion is on show at Buckingham Palace
Tudor and Stuart portraits were primarily meant to showcase the fashionable and hugely expensive clothes of their wearers. A fine exhibition of the Royal Collection gives a glimpse into portraits, jewelry and pieces of clothing of the time. Some of it has never been on show before. Exploring fashionable clothing worn during the Tudor and Stuart reigns (1485 – 1714) by members of the royal family, courtiers and the increasingly wealthy gentry, this exhibition compares paintings from the Royal Collection with rare surviving examples of costume, and unstitches the ‘truth’ of dress in art. In Fine Style follows the changing fashions of the period, demonstrates the spread of styles internationally and shows how clothing could convey important messages. Including works by Hans Holbein the Younger, Nicholas Hilliard, Van Dyck and Peter Lely, the exhibition brings together over 60 paintings. Such portraits allowed the sitter to express different aspects of their personality through clothing. Among the paintings on display are two portraits of the renowned court beauty Frances Stuart, Duchess of Richmond. Known as ‘La Belle Stuart’, she famously refused to become mistress to Charles II. In a portrait by Sir Peter Lely (c.1662) the Duchess wears a glamorous yellow silk gown. In another by Jacob Husymans (1664), she wears a masculine buff coat with her hair styled to resemble a male periwig, following the trend for women to dress in clothes inspired by male garments. This portrait goes on display for the first time in the exhibition. Also shown is a series of drawings, garments, jewellery, accessories and armour. Amongst these are:
- A hat badge, commonly known as the “Holbein George”shows a high-relief figure of St. George on horseback, facing right, slaying the dragon. This jewel has long been identified as belonging to a homogeneous group of small gold reliefs (émail en ronde bosse), distinguished by their style and enamelling technique. It may have been executed in Antwerp in 1520 and presented as a gift to Henry VIII.
- A diamond ring given by Charles I to his 19-year-old wife. It is a gold and diamond signet ring bearing the royal coat of arms and the cypher of Henrietta Maria, given to the young Queen by her husband Charles I in around 1628, three years after their marriage.
- A pendant of gold, rubies and diamond, incorporating a miniature of Elizabeth I. It was possibly presented to a courtier by the Queen as a sign of favour and worn as an earring. Earrings became an increasingly popular accessory for men towards the end of the 16th century, and it was fashionable to wear them in one ear only.
- The ornate set of armour belonging to the 13-year-old Henry, Prince of Wales (c.1607) was designed to echo the full breeches and V-shaped doublets of the day. The armour was a gift from a French nobleman and a statement of great extravagance, particularly since the adolescent Prince would soon have outgrown it. Heir to the English and Scottish thrones, Henry died of typhoid fever at the age of 18, and his younger brother succeeded him as the ill-fated Charles I.
- The enamelled diamond-encrusted box in which Mary II kept her face patches, which were stuck to the face to emphasise her creamy white skin of the leisured class and to conceal blemishes. They were applied using saliva or adhesive and produced in a variety of shapes, from crescents and flowers to animals – as many as seven were worn at once. It dates from around the year of the Queen’s death from smallpox, which caused terrible scarring to the skin.

“Holbein George”
Exhibition curator Anna Reynolds of Royal Collection Trust says: “Fashion was hugely important to court life and entry to the inner circle was largely driven by personal appearance. The rich and powerful were the trend-setters of the age, and used clothing to send out messages about their taste and status”.
In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion
The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace
10.05.2013 -06.10.2013
READ MORE:
In Fine Style: The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashion
By Anna Reynolds
The Royal Collection 2013
Hardback, 300 pages, 290 x 275 mm, over 250 colour illustrations
ISBN 978 1 905686 44 5
Robe
Welcome to ROBE – the fashion magazine the world has been waiting for, for the last 350 years, and your handy introduction to all that’s best in seventeenth-century haute-couture.
Paperback, 49 pages, 170 x 230 mm
ISBN 978 1 905686 85 8
In Fine Style App
This free interactive app lets you try on the outfits and accessories of the rich and powerful of the 16th and 17th centuries. Download the In Fine Style app, take a photo of yourself, and then try on fashionable clothes selected from the paintings in the exhibition. The app is inspired by a rare 17th-century portrait miniature of the wife of Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria, and a set of painted transparent overlays that transform the queen’s costume, hairstyle and even her gender.

















Marcella Pattyn









