When 19-year-old Lady Diana began her whirlwind romance with the heir to the throne, she only had two pieces of jewellery in her possession – a gold chain with her initial ‘D’ and a pair of gold earrings.
But with her new title came a glitzy makeover. Gone were the yellow dungarees and sweater vests of a nursery assistant and in came regal elegance, with world-envied jewels to match.
Diana’s sapphire engagement ring, now worn by her son William’s wife Kate, is arguably the most recognisable ring in the world and she became famed for her experimental styles – wearing an emerald choker as a headband.
In amongst the sparkles of the princess’s jewellery box were simpler pieces that, full of meaning, were cherished by Diana, many of them dedicated to her sons – William and Harry.
Now that the brothers are married, many of the jewels have been passed down to their wives Kate and Meghan, deepening the history of the accessories that defined the Diana’s era-defining image.
Diana’s most sentimental jewels
Three-strand pearl choker
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Diana’s three-strand choker complemented her floral Donald Campbell dress as she was pictured on board the Royal Yacht Britannia with Charles at the start of their honeymoon
The princess had an impressive collection of pearls, particularly pearl chokers, the first of which she received as an 18th birthday gift from her family.
It featured three strands of pearls and a flower cluster clasp with turquoise stones which Diana would twist to the back if it did not match her outfit.
Princess Diana was pictured wearing the choker to coordinate her floral Donald Campbell dress as she stood on board the Royal Yacht Britannia in Gibraltar with Charles at the start of their honeymoon.
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The princess later had the turquoise stones in the flower clasp replaced with pearls so it would not clash with her outfits
In 1984, the princess had the turquoise stones replaced with pearls so the necklace would not clash with her outfits and she was later pictured wearing the revamped choker with a white suit and pearl earrings to watch the Welsh Guards parade.
The piece was a shared style between Diana and her two older sisters, Jane and Sarah, who also received a three-strand pearl choker on their 18th birthdays.
At Diana’s funeral, all the Spencer ladies – including her mother, Frances Shand Kydd – wore strings of pearls in her honour.
‘D’ charm necklace
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Diana wore her ‘D’ charm necklace from the start of her relationship with Charles until after they were married
In her earliest involvements with the royals, a young Diana is pictured wearing a gold necklace with a ‘D’ charm.
While associated with her life before she acquired an extensive collection of valuable jewels, the princess continued to wear the necklace after marrying into the royal family.
She chose to wear the pendant to a polo match in Melbourne in 1985, four years after marrying Charles.
Gold charm bracelet
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The princess is pictured wearing her cherished charm bracelet when she arrived at Birmingham Airport in 1984 wearing a red Catherine Walker coat with matching pillbox hat
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Charles gifted her a number of charms, including a ‘W’ and ‘H’ to represent her two sons as well as a replica of St Paul’s Cathedral where the pair married in 1981
Paying tribute to the greatest loves of Diana’s life, her charm bracelet was a particularly personal item in her collection.
For ten years, Charles bought his wife a charm on her birthday, including a ‘W’ and ‘H’ to represent the names of their two sons and a gold wombat to represent the nickname given to William after their tour to Australia in 1983.
He also gifted her a replica of St Paul’s Cathedral where the couple married in 1981 as well as a tennis racket and a polo cap because of her enjoyment of the sports.
The princess had dreamed of becoming a ballet dancer so Charles added a pair of ballet shoes to her collection and gave her a teddy bear and an Apple for her love of New York.
Engraved gold necklace
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Charles also bought Diana a gold disc necklace engraved with the name of their first child, William after his birth in 1982
In another nod to her devotion to her children, Charles bought Diana a gold disc necklace engraved with the name ‘William’ after the birth of their first child in 1982.
Written in Charles’ loopy handwriting, Diana mainly wore the necklace in private, giving it one public outing at a polo match in Windsor alongside a playful polka dot dress and wearing both her watch and her husband’s watch.
Kate has been seen wearing a similar necklace, gifted to her by her younger sister Pippa, which has the name of her first son ‘George Louis Alexander’ coupled with a small heart-shaped charm with a ‘W’ inscribed on it.
Frances Shand Kydd earrings
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Diana borrowed her mother Frances Shand Kydd’s earrings for her wedding to Charles along with the Spencer family tiara
Diana wore few items of jewellery on her wedding day, opting to wear just a pair of earrings with her tiara and rings.
Her earrings were borrowed from her mother Frances Shand Kydd and featured a pear-shaped diamond surrounded by almost 50 smaller diamonds.
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Frances Shand Kydd was later seen wearing the earrings in a sombre appearance at her daughter’s funeral in 1997
She had previously worn the earrings for her first royal engagement with her fiancé for a charity recital at Goldsmiths Hall when she donned a glamorous strapless black Emanuel gown.
While Diana did not wear the earrings after her wedding, her mother continued to be seen in them on a number of occasions, including Prince Harry’s christening.
It is believed she then wore the earrings in a moving tribute to Diana at the princess’ funeral in 1997.
The Queen’s wedding watch
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The Queen was gifted a Vacheron Constantin watch by the Swiss Federal Republic for her wedding to Prince Philip which she later gave to Princess Diana to celebrate her marriage to then Prince Charles (pictured at an American Red Cross gala dinner in Washington in 1997)
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Princess Diana wore the watch gifted to her by the Queen for a gala dinner at the National Gallery in Washington DC in 1985
For her wedding to Prince Philip in 1947, the Swiss Federal Republic gifted then Princess Elizabeth and future Queen a delicate Vacheron Constantin watch.
The Queen then gave the accessory, which featured a diamond-encircled watch face with a diamond strap, to Diana as a wedding gift for her marriage to Prince Charles.
Diana wore the watch at many glamorous events, pairing it with her C-shaped diamond and pearl earrings for an American Red Cross gala dinner in Washington in 1997.
She had previously stunned wearing the watch with an elegant asymmetric beaded dress by Japanese designer Hachi for a gala dinner at the National Gallery in Washington DC in 1985.
The showstoppers
Sapphire and pearl choker
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Originally part of a brooch gifted to the princess by the Queen Mother, Diana had a large sapphire fashioned into a choker set within seven strands of pearls
The huge spellbinding stone set within seven strands of pearls became an iconic staple for Diana.
Originally part of a brooch gifted to the princess by the Queen Mother, the gem was sourced in Sri Lanka and Diana donned the accessory for a banquet in 1982.
She fashioned the stone into a choker the following year and used it to add drama to her outfits, wearing it with a slinky slip dress to the Met Gala in New York in 1996.
It is most remembered as the accessory which accompanied Diana’s off-the shoulder black ‘revenge dress’ in 1994 which she wore the night Charles publicly admitted his affair.
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Diana wore the choker with a navy blue slip dress to the Met Gala in New York in 1996 as well as with her ‘revenge dress’ which she wore the night Charles publicly admitted his affair
Amethyst and diamond cross necklace
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The princess wore the oversized Attallah Cross pendant by Garrard for a gala in 1987 to accesorise her extravagant Catherine Walker ballgown
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The necklace, with amethysts and diamonds, was auctioned by Sotheby’s in January 2023 and purchased by Kim Kardashian for $197,000
Diana wore the oversized Attallah Cross pendant, by Garrard, with an extravagant Catherine Walker ballgown to a Birthright charity gala in London in 1987.
The necklace, featuring square-cut amethysts and circular-cut diamonds, was owned by the former boss of Asprey and Garrard, the late Naim Attallah, who passed it on to his son, Ramsay.
Ramsay said; ‘Princess Diana and my father were friends and I remember that she often came to see him at the historic Garrard store on Regent Street, where his office was, and she would ask to borrow the pendant on several occasions. She really loved the piece.’
The item was auctioned by Sotheby’s in January 2023 and was purchased by Kim Kardashian for $197,000.
The ‘Swan Lake Suite’
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The Garrard necklace, featuring 178 diamonds and a fringe of five South Sea cultured pearls, was worn by Princess Diana at a performance of Swan Lake by the English National Opera in 1997
The dazzling diamond and pearl necklace was worn by Princess Diana at a performance of Swan Lake by the English National Opera in 1997 – one of her final public appearances before her death.
The set, made by Garrard, became known as the ‘Swan Lake Suite’ with the necklace featuring 178 diamonds and a fringe of five South Sea cultured pearls.
A spokesman for the jeweller Garrard said the necklace was made using stones Diana owned herself. ‘She designed it alongside the Crown Jeweller at the time, David Thomas.’
A pair of matching earrings completed the set but they had not yet been finished before Diana died that year.
South Sea cultured pearls are incredibly rare and come from the waters around Australia and Indonesia.
Much larger, smoother and rounder than average pearls, South Sea varieties come from the white-lipped pinctada maxima oyster, which is bigger than more common types — akoya or freshwater, for example.
Eleven-strand choker
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The princess had another dramatic pearl choker, featuring 11 rows of pearls with columns of diamonds and rubies
The dramatic stack of eleven rows of pearls made for an eye-catching choker that Diana wore to a number of theatre and film premier appearances.
It consisted of 900 pearls interspersed with columns of diamonds and rubies and was one of a number of diamond chokers worn by the princess.
She donned the glamorous piece with a red Victor Edelstein evening gown for a performance of Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra at the Royal Opera House in 1991 and later with a purple Versace gown for a gala dinner at The Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago in 1996.
Qatar diamond and pearl earrings
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Paired with the Spencer family tiara, Diana wore her diamond and pearl earrings, gifted from the Emir of Qatar, to a banquet in New Delhi in 1992
Diana was gifted a stunning pair of diamond and pearl earrings by the Emir of Qatar for her wedding to Charles in 1981.
The accessories feature a floral diamond cluster with a pearl drop hanging from a short stack of diamonds.
The earrings accompanied some of her most glamourous looks, pairing them with her aquamarine ring, the Queen’s wedding watch and the Spencer tiara.
Kate and Meghan have not been seen wearing the earrings which were a regular feature for Diana’s outfits.
The Spencer Tiara
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Princess Diana wore the Spencer family tiara on her wedding day and continued to wear the accessory after she married into the royal family (pictured wearing the headpiece for a reception in Australia in 1983)
On her wedding day, Lady Diana opted for a tiara from her own family’s collection rather than from the royal vault, wearing the Spencer Tiara.
Diana’s older sisters Jane and Sarah had both worn the tiara on their wedding days and after being bridesmaid for both, Diana longed for her turn wear the sparkling headpiece.
Despite the Spencer family having a history dating back to 15th century, the tiara was given to Diana’s grandmother, Cynthia, Viscountess Althorp, by a distant relative Lady Sarah Spencer as a wedding gift in 1919.
It was then was remounted and sections were added in 1930s, with the oldest pieces said to be at either end.
The Garrard creation features a central heart flanked with scrolls as well as star and trumpet-shaped flowers decorated with diamonds and set in silver.
The princess continued to wear the Spencer family heirloom after her marriage into the royal family, including on her first official royal tour to Australia in 1983.
The knock-offs
Crescent-shaped earrings
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Diana wore a pair of Butler and Wilson crescent-shaped earrings, which cost £23, for a visit to Saudi Arabia in 1986
Diana discovered costume jewellers Butler and Wilson in 1984 and would often visit their Fulham Road store when she had a spare afternoon.
The bold and colourful pieces caught the princess’ eye and she would wear the cheap, fun items as a replacement for the royal family’s diamonds.
‘It’s more sensible for someone who’s only 25 to do so,’ the young princess once said.
She opted for a pair of £23 Butler and Wilson crescent-shaped earrings for a visit to Saudi Arabia in 1986.
She relished at the thought of observers admiring her ‘diamond’ earrings, with many members of the Press assuming they had been a gift from her host King Khalid.
Snake and star brooches
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Diana rocked an oversized Butler and Wilson snake brooch pinned to a Jasper Conran trouser suit for the Prince’s Trust Concert in 1986
As a princess of the eighties, Diana rocked an oversized Butler and Wilson snake brooch pinned to a Jasper Conran trouser suit for the Prince’s Trust Concert in 1986, seeing performances from the likes of Elton John and Rod Stewart.
Butler and Wilson founder Simon Wilson said Diana would visit the shop every few months, saying: ‘She wasn’t grand. She just came in with a single bodyguard and behaved like a normal customer.
‘The bodyguard would stand in the corner and she would go and look at the earrings and hold them up to herself in the mirror and say to the other customers: “What do you think? Do you like these?”
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Charles visited a Butler & Wilson concession in Marshall Field’s department store in Chicago in 1986 and bought Diana a Maltese Cross gold brooch which she pinned to her gown for the premiere of The Mission in London
‘Some of them nearly fainted when they saw it was her.’
Knowing his wife’s love of the brand, Charles visited a Butler & Wilson concession in Marshall Field’s department store in Chicago in 1986 and bought Diana a Maltese Cross gold brooch.
She sported the £48 accessory at the centre of her Murray Arbeid flamenco dress for the premiere of The Mission in London in 1986, accompanied by one black and one red glove that she had picked up on the high street.
Pieces also seen on Kate
Engagement ring
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Diana’s picked out her own ring, which featured a 12-carat Ceylon sapphire surrounded by 14 diamonds
Diana’s stunning ring, featuring a 12-carat Ceylon sapphire surrounded by 14 diamonds, became emblematic not only of the princess’ colourful taste in jewellery, but also of her tragic romance with Charles which the world followed until their divorce in 1996.
In true fairytale style, the future princess was presented with a selection of rings by Garrard in February 1981 to choose whichever one she wanted.
The ring was inspired by a sapphire and diamond cluster brooch made for Prince Albert in 1840, which he later gifted to Queen Victoria as a wedding present.
Rather than being custom-made, the ring Diana chose was could be viewed and purchased by customers in the Garrard catalogue, costing £28,000 at the time.
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Just days after her divorce from Charles, Diana appeared without her ring and wore a black Versace dress to walk down the red carpet
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Prince William proposed to Kate in 2010 in Kenya with Diana’s ring, saying: ‘It was my way of making sure mother didn’t miss out on today and the excitement’
While Diana continued to wear the ring after she had separated from Charles, she was first spotted without it days after the decree nisi came through.
For a walk down the red carpet, Diana looked chic in a black Versace dress and sported bold red nails, drawing attention to her ringless hand.
After Diana’s death in 1997, Prince William elected to keep his late mother’s watch and Prince Harry chose her wedding ring – but it was handed over to his older brother when he planned to marry Kate.
Proposing in Kenya with Diana’s ring in 2010, William said: ‘It was my way of making sure mother didn’t miss out on today and the excitement.’
Emerald choker
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Princess Diana was gifted a glamorous emerald choker by the Queen after her marriage to Charles and Kate has also been seen wearing the accessory
Diana’s glamorous emerald choker became a tool for the princess to present her rebellious style.
The late Queen inherited the piece after the death of her grandmother, Queen Mary, in 1953 and she gifted the necklace to Diana after her marriage to Charles.
The princess was spotted a number of times in the striking choker but later chose to wear it as a headband, inspired to adopt the look when she once tried to put it on over her head but it got stuck, according to royal biographer Kitty Kelley.
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Diana wore the necklace as a headband in 1985 while at a dinner dance in Melbourne, getting the idea after she tried to put the choker on over her head and it got stuck
Kate was spotted in the choker as part of her green look for the Earthshot Prize Awards last year to reward contributions to environmentalism.
Recycling the heirloom, the princess kept her look sustainable, renting a Solace gown from rental platform HURR while wearing the necklace in the traditional way.
Collingwood pearl drop earrings
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Diana was gifted a pair of pearl drop earrings by the Spencer family jewellers, Collingwood, which she wore on a tour of France with Charles in 1988
Another of the princess’ favourite pearl accessories were the diamond and pearl drop earrings gifted to her by Collingwood – the Spencer family jewellers.
The earrings, which have three rows of small diamonds and a pearl hanging from two diamond studs, were worn by the princess for a dinner during the state visit of King Khalid of Saudi Arabia in 1981 in the month before she married Charles.
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Kate also wore the earrings for a simple jewellery look when she attended the Service of Thanksgiving for the life of Prince Philip last year
She continued to wear the beloved and versatile earrings after her marriage, including on her tour of France with Charles in 1988, and chose them for her ‘revenge’ look along with her sapphire and pearl choker.
The Princess of Wales now wears the earrings as much as her husband’s late mother, opting for the accessories for a simple jewellery look when she attended the Service of Thanksgiving for the life of Prince Philip last year.
Prince of Wales Feathers Pendant
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After marrying Charles, then the Prince of Wales, the Queen Mother gifted Diana the Prince of Wales feather pendant, displaying her husband’s heraldic badge
When Diana married Charles in 1981, then the Prince of Wales, she was gifted the Prince of Wales feather pendant by the Queen Mother, which displayed her husband’s heraldic badge.
Owned by the Crown, the piece was originally a wedding gift in 1863 from the Ladies of Bristol to Princess Alexandra of Denmark when she married Bertie, the then-Prince of Wales who became Edward VII. After Diana’s death, the pendant was returned to the Queen’s collection.
Diana regularly wore the accessory but chose to suspend the pendant on a short tennis necklace, part of a suite of diamonds she received as a wedding present from the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia.
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The pendant has also been worn by Camilla and Kate, but both have worn it as a brooch with its detachable cabochon emerald
The piece, featuring 18 round cut diamonds with small emeralds that surround the Prince of Wales feathers symbol, was worn as a brooch by Camilla in 2006 who became the first person to wear the item after Diana.
Kate has now also been seen wearing the pendant, becoming the Princess of Wales after the Queen’s death.
She also sported the item as a brooch, complete with its detachable cabochon emerald, for her first state visit as the Princess of Wales to welcome South Africa’s president Cyril Ramaphosa to the UK last year.
C-shaped diamond and pearl drop earrings
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Diana wore the earrings when she was named Humanitarian of the Year at the United Cerebral Palsy dinner in New York in 1995
Diana was regularly spotted in a striking pair of C-shaped diamond earrings featuring baguette diamonds and a diamond leaf decoration with hanging pearls on each.
The princess chose the earring for engagements around the world, including with an elegant halter-neck Catherine Walker gown for a charity dinner at the Palace of Versailles in 1994 and with an electric blue dress at a charity ball in Australia in 1996.
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The Princess of Wales has also worn the earrings but with a different set of pearls to Diana (pictured during Royal Ascot in 2022)
The pearl could also be removed from the earrings and Diana wore the diamond studs on their own to attend the production of Swan Lake at the Royal Albert Hall in 1997.
The accessories have now become a favourite of Kate’s, who first wore them for a red carpet appearance at the BAFTAs in 2019.
She also wore them for a trip to Ascot and later for a more solemn appearance at the Remembrance Sunday service in London last year.
The earrings make for a different look on Kate because she attaches a different set of pearls to the studs to the larger South Sea pearls worn by Diana.
Sapphire and diamond cluster earrings
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Diana had the sapphire earrings fashioned from a watch she was gifted by the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia
Diana was gifted a spectacular set of sapphire-centred accessories as a wedding gift from the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia.
Made by Asprey, the suite featured a Burmese sapphire pendant set in a jagged sunray fringe of diamonds and hung on a thin diamond tennis necklace; matching earrings and a bracelet, and a sapphire-studded watch, the strap of which contained seven oval-shaped sapphires set in clusters of diamonds.
Diana fashioned four of the sapphire and diamond clusters into earrings, two of which were detachable.
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Kate reinvented the earrings as drop earrings and wore them on a visit to Los Angeles in 2011
She was often seen wearing the sapphires as studs and these have also been seen on Kate – but she has reinvented them as drop earrings.
Kate wore them for the first time when she watched Andy Murray from the Royal Box at Wimbledon in 2011 and also wore them during an official visit to Canada and America.
Three-strand pearl bracelet
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Kate frequently wears Diana’s three-strand pearl bracelet designed by Nigel Milne, including on a visit to Poland and Germany in 2017
Princess Diana wore her three-strand pearl bracelet with her famously striking Catherine Walker ‘Elvis’ dress while on an official visit to Hong Kong in 1989.
The bracelet was accompanied by the royal’s Collingwood pearl drop earrings and the stunning Cambridge Lover’s Knot tiara, originally made by Queen Mary in 1914 to her own design from pearls and diamonds already in her family’s possession.
In her will Queen Mary left the tiara to to the Queen who wore it frequently, later giving it to Diana as a wedding present.
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Princess Diana wore the bracelet with her famously striking Catherine Walker ‘Elvis’ dress while on an official visit to Hong Kong in 1989
Kate has also been spotted wearing the tiara, opting for the accessory for the first state banquet of King Charles’ reign at Buckingham Palace last year.
She has also frequently worn Diana’s three-strand bracelet, donning the accessory for a reception at Berlin’s Clärchens Ballhaus in 2017.
The bracelet, which was passed onto Prince William after his mother died, was designed by Nigel Milne and created in 1988.
Milne and his wife Cherry decided to produce several pieces of jewellery with proceeds of the sales going to charity BIRTHRIGHT, of which Diana was patron.
One of the pieces was the bracelet that has been seen adorning Kate’s wrist and that Diana wore on several occasions including at the Birthright Ball in 1989.
Pieces also seen on Meghan
Aquamarine ring
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Diana commissioned her famed extravagant aquamarine ring after she was given the gem by her friend Lucia Flecha de Lima (pictured at a Christie’s pre-auction party in 1997)
Diana commissioned her famed extravagant aquamarine ring after she was given the gem by her friend Lucia Flecha de Lima.
It was made into a ring by Asprey in 1996 with some claiming it was worn to replace her sapphire engagement ring after her divorce.
The ring, featuring a 13-carat emerald-cut aquamarine, was worn by Diana in 1996 with an electric blue Versace gown for a fundraising gala in Sydney and again at the Christie’s pre-auction party for the auction of the princess’ dresses in 1997.
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Meghan has worn the ring on a number of occasions, including on her wedding day for the evening party at Frogmore House
The £75,000 ring has since been worn by the Duchess of Sussex, choosing to wearing the ring for the evening party at Frogmore House on her wedding day.
Also appearing in white gowns, Meghan accessorised with the ring during a trip to Tonga with Prince Harry in 2018 and again at the Ripple of Hope Gala in New York last year.
Gold bangle with blue stones
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Diana was seen wearing a gold bangle with blue stones on her visit to the Lord Gage Centre in Newham, East London in 1990 (pictured greeting Nellie Corbett)
Princess Diana’s gold bangle with blue stones was on display in the beautiful snaps of her greeting Nellie Corbett during her visit to the Lord Gage Centre in Newham, East London in 1990.
The piece, part of the jewellery collection left to her two sons, was seen on Meghan on the first day of her Australian tour with Prince Harry in 2018.
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The Duchess of Sussex has also sported the bangle, including for the charity gala performance of Cirque du Soleil’s Totem at the Royal Albert Hall
The day after revealing she was expecting her first child, the duchess looked elegant in a white cocktail dress in Sydney by Australian label Karen Gee, adding to the subtle look with Diana’s bangle.
She was also spotted wearing the bangle as part of a glamorous look for the charity gala performance of Cirque du Soleil’s Totem at the Royal Albert Hall the following year, coupling her understated jewellery with a navy sequin Roland Mouret gown.
Butterfly earrings
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Diana wore her butterfly earrings with a matching necklace while on a royal tour of Canada in 1986 alongside a cobalt blue Catherine Walker suit
The day after announcing that she was expecting her first child, Meghan stepped out on the first day of her Australian tour with Harry sporting a pair of butterfly-shaped earrings.
The diamond-encrusted jewels, which also feature darker stones on the butterfly’s lower wings, were a favourite of Princess Diana’s.
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Meghan wore the earrings on the first day of her Australian tour in 2018 with Harry, the day after announcing that she was expecting her first child
She wore them on her royal tour of Canada in May 1986 with a matching statement gold necklace, also featuring a large butterfly alongside her cobalt blue suit and hat by Catherine Walker.
Meghan teamed her earrings with a £1,000 white shift dress by Australian designer Karen Gee and finished the look with Diana’s gold bangle with blue stones.
Cartier watch
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Diana wore her elegant Cartier gold Tank watch on a number of occasions, including for an engagement at the British Lung Foundation in 1997 (pictured)
Diana wore the elegant timepiece on a number of occasions, including a 1997 visit to London’s Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Hindu Temple and an engagement at the British Lung Foundation that same year.
The gold Cartier Tank watch was priced at £17,800 at the time and Prince William chose to keep the watch to remember his mother – later asking his brother Harry if he could swap the watch for the engagement ring which he later gave to Kate.
Harry is thought to have gifted the watch to Meghan and she wears the accessory frequently, including in an official photograph with Harry in 2020 and for the Invictus Games in The Hague last year.
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Meghan also enjoys wearing the watch, including for for the Invictus Games in The Hague last year