As anticipation builds for the upcoming French state visit to Windsor Castle (July 8–10), royal watchers have one sparkling question: Which tiara will Princess Catherine wear to the banquet?
If rumors are true—and Catherine steps out in emeralds—we may be in for a royal-style showdown that’s less diplomacy and more drama.
A Jewel With a History… and a Bit of Baggage
Let’s rewind to 2018. Meghan Markle, then a newly minted royal bride-to-be, was said to have set her sights on a very specific tiara: the emerald-studded Vladimir Tiara, a historic piece smuggled out of imperial Russia and tucked away in the royal vault.
According to royal sources and biographers like Valentine Low, Meghan didn’t just want a tiara—she wanted the tiara. Her vision? To become forever associated with emeralds, just as Princess Catherine is now synonymous with sapphires.
But Queen Elizabeth II reportedly said a polite but firm no. The emerald tiara—steeped in history and controversy—wasn’t deemed suitable for a royal newcomer. Meghan was eventually offered the Queen Mary Diamond Bandeau (a beautiful tiara in its own right), but the denial allegedly sparked what insiders described as a “tiara tantrum.”
Fast forward to 2025, and whispers are swirling: Princess Catherine may wear that very emerald tiara—or one like it—to the French state banquet.
Cue the Montecito Meltdown?
The thought of Catherine shimmering in the exact crown Meghan was once denied is, well, tiara kryptonite in California. Social media has already begun bracing for impact: “Expect an Instagram reel in 3… 2… 1,” one user joked. And if past patterns hold, Meghan’s response may include a spontaneous lifestyle post—perhaps set in a rented French-style garden, with fresh pastries, blurry sepia filters, and a caption about ancestral healing.
She may even throw in a faux accent and rename Lilibet something like “Lilou” just to underscore her sudden deep bond with French culture.
Meanwhile, Catherine will be walking the halls of Windsor Castle, standing shoulder to shoulder with world leaders, and possibly wearing a jewel that reaffirms her place at the center of the royal stage.
A Tale of Two Royal Realities
On one side: Catherine, polished and poised, representing the Crown in a banquet steeped in tradition and diplomatic symbolism.
On the other: Meghan, curating content from Montecito, selling lifestyle dreams under dramatic lighting and captioned hashtags.
If Catherine pairs the emerald tiara with Princess Diana’s iconic sapphire necklace, the internet might just collapse under the weight of royal symbolism. And, as one user put it, “If that happens, don’t be surprised if Wi-Fi mysteriously cuts out in Montecito for 48 hours.”
Coincidence? Likely not.