I'd like to open an account tamsulosina y calculo renal But dresses can bring problems. Six Maids of Honour followed the Queen carrying her robes down the aisle of the Abbey. They wore dresses designed by Hartnell (as did the Queen and all the principal ladies of the immediate Royal family) made of thick silk and embroidered with small gold leaves and pearl white blossom using sequins, pearls and tiny bugle beads. But 60 years on many of the dresses are ‘not in good repair’, de Guitaut admits. So one of the dresses on show is a prototype made by Hartnell and owned by a private collector; the other is authentic. ‘Silk is an organic material and so it’s in a constant state of deterioration. What you really need to do is pack it in a box and put it in a cupboard, and make sure there are no moths,’ de Guitaut says. One of the Maids of Honour, Rosemary Spencer-Churchill (now Lady Rosemary Muir), recently revealed on Radio 4’s The Reunion that her dress had been exhibited in the library at Blenheim Palace ‘in full sun’ and was now lost, ‘much to my fury’. (The Maids also revealed that on the day they had phials of smelling salts tucked in their gloves.)
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