HomeFashion & StyleThree Looks in One Week: How Princess Leonor of Spain Got Dressed...

Three Looks in One Week: How Princess Leonor of Spain Got Dressed for the Future

Camouflage, couture, and a borrowed papal stage. Spain’s heir wore authority three different ways.

As an Amazon Associate, Crown & Court earns from qualifying purchases.

The dress code for meeting a Pope is strict. Black. Long sleeves. A modest neckline. No tiara, no flash, no argument. Princess Leonor of Spain followed every rule. And still found a way to say something.

On 6 June, she met Pope Leo XIV for the first time as an adult heir. A black midi dress. Long sleeves. A modest V-neck. A wide black belt that did the only loud thing in the room. Earrings by Boira, a small Spanish glass house still rebuilding after the DANA floods. Nothing about that pairing was accidental.

Twenty-four hours later, she changed the entire conversation. A pastel blue midi by Hannibal Laguna, Bardot neckline, aquamarine jewellery, no mantilla. The colour matched her father’s tie. The message matched her role. Tradition, observed. Modernity, permitted.

Days earlier, she had been somewhere else entirely. Cadet fatigues. A parachute harness. The inside of a military transport plane. The same woman, completing her Basic Parachuting Course at Spain’s Méndez Parada military school. The first member of the Spanish royal family ever to do so.

Three looks. One week. Camouflage to protocol to colour, in that order. That is not a coincidence. That is a calendar built by people who understand exactly what each audience needs to see.

She is not the only European heir doing this. The Princess of Wales made the same point in June, when she wore a recycled gown like she meant it at Trooping the Colour rather than reaching for something new.

Spain’s heir is twenty years old and about to start a degree in political science. She has, in the space of one June week, dressed for the military, the Vatican, and the cameras, and given each one a slightly different version of the same woman. Most twenty-year-olds change their minds. She changes her wardrobe instead. Somehow, she says more by doing it.

How to Read a Dress is the book to keep on a desk for exactly this. Three centuries of women saying things with fabric instead of words. Leonor would fit right in.

Watch Murcia next. She has more uniforms to get through before September.


Vivienne St. Claire is Crown & Court’s Fashion & Style correspondent. A former fashion editor with twenty years cataloguing royal style worldwide, she has sat front row at couture shows and in palace drawing rooms, and believes every wardrobe choice is a political act.

“A royal never gets dressed by accident.”

Vivienne St. Claire
Vivienne St. Claire
Former fashion editor turned royal style obsessive. Has spent two decades cataloguing every brooch, hemline, and color choice made by queens and princesses worldwide. Believes fashion is always political. "A royal never gets dressed by accident."

From the Editor

Royal Reading List

The King Never Smiles book cover painting

The King Never Smiles

Paul M. Handley

View on Amazon
Thailand: A Short History book cover painting

Thailand: A Short History

David K. Wyatt

View on Amazon
A Kingdom in Crisis book cover painting

A Kingdom in Crisis

Andrew MacGregor Marshall

View on Amazon
The House of Orange book cover painting

The House of Orange in Revolution and War

Koch, van der Meulen & van Zanten

View on Amazon
Amalia book cover painting

Amalia

Claudia de Breij

View on Amazon
The Duchess of Cambridge book cover painting

The Duchess of Cambridge: A Decade of Modern Royal Style

Bethan Holt

View on Amazon

Follow Us

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow

Latest Posts

Two Minutes Apart, A World Apart: What Monaco’s Constitution Still Says About Sons and Daughters

Princess Gabriella of Monaco was born two minutes before her twin brother Jacques. Under Monaco's 2002 succession law, that head start changed nothing.

Three Years Gone, One Dress Reworn: Catherine’s Royal Ascot Comeback

After a three-year absence, the Princess of Wales returned to Royal Ascot in a dress she'd already worn twice before. Vivienne St. Claire on why that was deliberate.

Prince George Will Follow His Father to Eton College This September

Prince George will attend Eton College starting this September, Kensington Palace has confirmed, following the same path as his father and uncle before him.

Spain’s Heir Is Doing Everything Right. The Polls Still Can’t Agree If It Matters.

Spain's polls on monarchy versus republic disagree wildly with each other. What they agree on is a generational shift the palace can't fix with a popular princess alone.

The Princess Who Walked Across a Harvard Stage Under a Name Nobody Recognised

Princess Elisabeth of Belgium finished her Harvard master's this May, collecting her diploma under her family name rather than her royal title. Here's what her education says about her family.