Meghan and Harry on their wedding day in May. Credit: Aaron Chown/WPA Pool/Getty Images
The pregnant form in high fashion
"We saw a celebration of motherhood walking the catwalks this Spring-Summer 2019 season," said Elle UK editor-in-chief Anne-Marie Curtis in an email. "(There was) model Lily Alridge with a bump at Brandon Maxwell's show, a pregnant Arizona Muse walked Temperley in London; Gareth Pugh sent a faux pregnancy bump in acid-washed dresses down the runway, and model Valeria Garcia even took to the catwalk at the Marta Jakubowski show whilst using a breast pump. Needless to say, Meghan Markle will be in plenty of fashion company."
Slick Woods (center) was one of two pregnant models to walk Rihanna's Savage x Fenty show at New York Fashion Week. Credit: Brian Ach/Getty Images North America/Getty Images for Savage X Fenty
It's a lesson that London boutique owner Alex Eagle, creative director of The Store retail concept spaces, embraced during her pregnancy.
"I feel women have embraced being pregnant and are adjusting their personal style to accommodate their changing figure," she wrote in an email. "I find my friends leaning towards brands that are oversized, but dress the bump elegantly rather than hiding it completely."
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Beyoncé performs pregnant with twins during the 59th Annual Grammy Music Awards on February 12, 2017, in Los Angeles, California. Credit: VALERIE MACON/AFP/Getty Images
But while designers have dressed models in custom high-fashion ensembles, off-the-rack maternity options remain limited, with no major brands producing maternity wear. The case, arguably, is that most women wear maternity fashions for only a short period of time and are therefore reluctant to invest.
Tailored to fit
But to fashion and identity commentator Caryn Franklin, this reluctance on the part of major brands to dress the pregnant body presents Meghan with a chance to platform emerging talents who do take that market seriously.
"This is a great opportunity for Megan to highlight an emerging independent business featuring maternity wear by showcasing bold and stylish designs during her working day in the later months of her pregnancy," Franklin said in an email. In doing so, Meghan could potentially spark new trends for pregnant women around the world.
The late Diana Princess of Wales photographed in 1984 while pregnant with Prince Harry. Credit: Anwar Hussein/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
It's not rare, after all, for a mother-to-be with enough shimmer to change the way pregnant women dress. In 1961, The New York Times wrote of how the "bright colors and elegant lines" worn by Jackie Kennedy during her pregnancy "did not go unnoticed by manufacturers or expectant mothers," and, in 1984, The Los Angeles Times reported that "the clothes industry was ecstatic about the prospect of a big boom in the sale of high fashion maternity clothes" when Princess Diana was pregnant with Prince Harry.
With several months to go until her due date, we've likely got some time before Meghan will have to swap her straight-sized outfits for something noticeably roomier.
"Given her penchant for chic clean lines and dark colors, she'll keep it chic and tailored, with pieces that will flatter and make a virtue of the bump," Helena Lee, features director at Harper's Bazaar, predicted in an email.
But however she chooses to dress, the world will be watching all the while, waiting to see the Meghan Look adapt and evolve.
https://www.cnn.com/style/article/meghan-markle-pregnancy-maternity-fashion/index.html
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