King’s charity teams up with Chanel and le19M to teach future hatmakers
The King’s Foundation has announced its first Metiers d’art Millinery Fellowship.
The King’s charity is to run a new millinery course in partnership with Chanel and le19M to train the next generation of hatmakers.
As the King and Queen joined racegoers on the first day of Royal Ascot, The King’s Foundation announced its first Metiers d’art Millinery Fellowship.
The students will spend time at le19M, Chanel’s creative hub for artisans in Paris, with the support of esteemed Parisienne hatmakers Maison Michel.
The future milliners will learn blocking, felt shaping, dyeing, feather and flower making, along with key couture skills and finishes, working to a creative brief inspired by the gardens at Charles’ country home Highgrove.
Creative director of Maison Michel, Priscilla Royer, will offer mentorship and guidance.
“The Millinery Fellowship will be a much-needed postgraduate-level programme in the UK to prepare students to enter the workplace with the right skills, design confidence and industry insight.”
Chanel SAS and le19M president Bruno Pavlovsky said: “Our longstanding vision has been to nurture and develop the specialist skills of the Metiers d’art in order to recruit, train and transmit their savoir-faire to the next generation.
It follows the charity’s embroidery fellowship with Chanel and le19M which began in 2023.
Charles and Camilla took to a carriage as they joined the traditional procession at the start of the famous Royal Ascot meet on Tuesday.
Punters dressed in stunning hats, summer dresses and smart suits will cheer on the riders over the next five days at the Berkshire racecourse, with the most colourful and creative millinery creations shown off on Ladies Day on Thursday.