Kate Middleton wore three poppy flowers for the anniversary on Sunday, but why?

KAtee Middleton joined senior members of the royal family at Sunday’s memorial service in London, where Britons honor fallen heroes.

The Princess of Wales appears to pay tribute to her late mother-in-law, Princess Diana, who chose to wear a pair of diamond and pearl earrings that were once owned by the mother of Prince William and the first Princess of Wales.

If the earrings match, it’s Kate’s third time wearing the jewelry, which we first saw her wear at the BAFTA party in 2019 and earlier this year during her visit to Ascot.

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Kate stood beside Camilla in Whitehall in Westminster to watch her husband, Prince William, lay a poppy wreath at the memorial. King Charles was crying while laying a wreath.

Sunday’s memorial service was an event that the late Queen Elizabeth considered one of the most important in her schedule, as she devoted her entire life to the armed forces and the people who served for their country.

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There is no “right” way to wear a poppy.

For her part, the Princess of Wales once again admired her custom of wearing three poppies on the lapel at the ceremony, even though everyone only wore one. She is said to have chosen to wear three poppy flowers in honor of the war dead: Kate’s grandfather, Frances Lupton, had five sons, three of whom, Francis, Maurice and Lionel, died in the war.

However, this has not been confirmed by Buckingham Palace. It is the first remembrance Sunday since the Queen’s death nine weeks ago, on September 8.

According to The Royal British Legion, “there is no ‘correct’ way to wear a poppy.” “It’s a matter of personal choice whether someone chooses to wear a poppy and how they choose to wear it.

Queen Elizabeth II, who died just nine weeks ago at the age of 96, has considered the Sunday Commemoration Day, which commemorates the war dead, one of the most important and important engagements in the royal calendar.

The British Legion has been selling poppies for nearly a century – the flower became a symbol of remembrance after it was grown on the battlefields when World War I ended.

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