Zara Tindall has experienced her fair share of memorable fashion moments in the spotlight of being a royal.
The 42-year-old is no stranger to sartorial success, as evidenced by her daring and gorgeous Ascot outfits and her Cinderella-blue Laura Green dress for King Charles’s Coronation.
These days the mother of three can usually be seen in her equestrian gear as an Olympic athlete partaking in trials throughout the year.
Princess Anne’s daughter wore a few cute looks and royal rule-breaking clothes throughout her adolescent years that she could recreate one day.
This is despite the fact that the Royal Family’s impeccable fashion has evolved over the years.
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Back in 1998, Zara attended the nuptials of Simon Sebag-Montefiore and Santa Palmer-Tomkinson.
The royal, who was 17 at the time, was captured on camera getting out of a car in front of The Liberal Jewish Synagogue in St. John’s Wood, London.
Zara chose a stylish pinstripe miniskirt and a coordinating fitted jacket in the colour dark ebony.
The royal donned a pair of square-toed black shoes and a boater hat that was embellished with swathes of black fabric.
Zara accessorised her wedding guest look by sporting a lovely beaded necklace in a very 1990s-style while keeping her makeup simple and her hair nicely blow-dried.
Even though it is not strictly against the rules, royals rarely dress in all-black attire outside of a declared time of mourning, and certainly not to a wedding.
Zara appeared to disregard the royal style protocol by wearing a stylish striped little skirt that was only four inches above the knee in length.
The royal’s style history has already displayed her rebellious side. The mother-of-three looked stunning in a strapless satin dress created by American fashion designer Vera Wang in 2008 when she served as a bridesmaid for her brother Peter Phillips’s wedding.
The striking sage-green dress, which had a ruched bodice and delicate bow design, represented a revolutionary shift for royal bridesmaids.
Despite not being a formal royal requirement, it is widely accepted that royal bridesmaids are expected to wear white.
This is due to a long-held notion that the colour white warded off evil spirits.
In order to safely hide the bride from the wedding party, a bride would dress her bridesmaids in white to confuse any such spirits.