WATCH THE FULL EPISODE: 'SPECTACULAR!' We had a PRIVATE TOUR of the late Queen's wardrobeBook your visit to Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life in Style by clicking hereSee more Daily Mail on Google - save us as a Preferred SourceBy JOSEPH LUKE PALMER Published: 06:00 BST, 27 May 2026 | Updated: 06:07 BST, 27 May 2026

In a special episode of the Daily Mail's Palace Confidential, royal editor Rebecca English tours an exhibition which charts Queen Elizabeth's historic reign through clothes, guided by its curator, Caroline de Guitaut.To mark what would have been the monarch's centenary, Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life in Style puts many of her most iconic outfits and accessories on public display for the first time at The King's Gallery, Buckingham Palace.Among the pieces visitors can study up close is the historic gown from the Queen's 1953 coronation, created by royal couturier and longtime collaborator Sir Norman Hartnell.Hartnell was given around eight months to realise his vision for the outfit, eventually presenting the monarch with eight separate designs to choose from. In a special episode of Palace Confidential, Rebecca English tours an exhibition which charts Queen Elizabeth's historic reign through clothes, guided by its curator, Caroline de GuitauThe Queen selected the last of Hartnell's eight designs, de Guitaut told English - a gown of ivory silk satin echoing her 1947 wedding dress - but added one instruction of her own.'The Queen made it very clear that she did not just want emblems from the United Kingdom embroidered on it,' de Guitaut explained.'She wanted emblems from all the countries where she was then Queen. The gown is almost like a piece of diplomatic messaging.'Hartnell's original design carried only four emblems: the Tudor rose, the Scottish thistle, the Irish shamrock and, for Wales, a daffodil.After the Queen's intervention, the finished gown carried a richly embroidered array of emblems from across the Commonwealth: the Canadian maple leaf, the Australian wattle, the silver fern of New Zealand, the South African protea, a lotus for India and wheat for Pakistan.This was the first time a coronation outfit honoured nations from outside the British Isles. The dress also marked another first for royal fashion. Among the pieces visitors can study up close is the historic gown from the Queen's 1953 coronation, created by royal couturier and longtime collaborator Sir Norman Hartnell The Queen selected the last of Hartnell's eight designs, de Guitaut told English - a gown of ivory silk satin echoing her 1947 wedding dress - but added one instruction of her own'The Queen actually instructed for all the embroidery to be done in colour,' de Guitaut explained.'This was a first at the time - but helped make the piece completely timeless.'Where past coronation gowns had been worked almost entirely in silver and white thread, the Queen wanted the emblems stitched in lifelike colour, giving the dress a richness that has not faded today.All the embroidery is thought to have brought the gown's weight to between four and five kilograms. Hartnell was forced to sew horsehair padding into the hips to help it keep its shape. For more of the late Queen's most iconic outfits explained, subscribe to Palace Confidential on YouTube to watch the full episode.