Princess Diana Was Told Not to Wear This Color as a RoyalâSo She Wore It âWhenever She Pleasedâ After Splitting From Prince Charles
Princess Diana Was Told Not to Wear This Color as a RoyalâSo She Wore It âWhenever She Pleasedâ After Splitting From Prince Charles

Rachel BurchfieldFri, July 3, 2026 at 5:46 PM UTC
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Princess Diana on her final birthday on July 1, 1997.Credit: GettyThe Gist -
One unspoken royal fashion rule? Wearing the color black is reserved for mourningânot for day-to-day wear.
Princess Diana often bucked this tradition, particularly after separating from Prince Charles in 1992 (hello, 1994âs âRevenge Dressâ).
The former Princess of Wales went against the rule even before marrying into the royal family, breaking it as early as March 1981, before she and Charles married that July.
The royal family is chock full of customs and traditionsâincluding what to wear, and when.
For royals, black is typically considered to be a color of mourning, not to be worn in oneâs day-to-day life. Thatâs a royal fashion rule that Princess Diana always went againstâparticularly after her marriage to Prince Charles ended. The couple separated in 1992 and eventually finalized their divorce in 1996.

Princess Diana on November 20, 1995.Credit: Getty
In addition to her black âRevenge Dressâ lookâone of her most iconic looks of all time, worn in June 1994âthe former Princess of Wales also wore black to a charity gala in November 1995, on the same night that her controversial BBC Panorama interview aired. Designer Jacques Azaguryâwho worked with Diana on some of the more daring looks she wore towards the end of her lifeâsaid on Hello!âs âA Right Royal Podcastâ that she turned to him to design that November 1995 look.
âShe called me to the palace and told me she had done the interview,â he said. âShe explained her reasons, saying, âLook, I havenât said anything bad. I just want to tell things the way they are.â But she knew the interview would be airing at the exact same time she was due to step out at a cancer research fundraiser that evening. She needed something great for her appearance.â
âI took three dresses to her, all of them black, because I loved her in black,â Azagury said. âOf course, by that time, she was finally able to wear the color whenever she pleased. If you notice, the minute she was free from royal restrictions, she wore as much black as possible.â

Princess Diana's "Revenge Dress" is one of her most iconic black ensembles.Credit: Getty
Diana chose a dress âstraight awayââa âvery simple dress with an Empire waist, made with layers of georgette and crĂȘpe,â the designer said. âIt was incredibly lightâjust skimming her bodyâwith a top made of embroidered lace. And, again, the neckline was getting lower.â
She later wore the same dress to an event with Henry Kissinger in New York City. âAll the newspapers the following morning featured photographs of Henry Kissinger looking down at her cleavage,â Azagury said. âWe had quite a laugh about that one.â
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Henry Kissinger and Princess Diana.Credit: Getty
In addition to saving black for times of mourning, royals also typically wear bright colors to appearances so as to be seen more easily. Hello! reported that, more and more in the mid-1990s, Diana âtransformed a color once tied to restriction into a powerful visual assertion of her independence.â
Fashion designer Dame Zandra Rhodes said (per Hello!) that Diana loved little black dresses, but royal restrictions prevented her from wearing them as she wanted to. âShe was very shy,â Rhodes said. âShe would come into my shop in Mayfair and go through the rails. Sometimes she picked something in black, which the royals werenât allowed to wear except at funerals, so we would make it in her size in a different color.â
Though there was the unspoken rule about wearing black, Diana disregarded it as early as 1981, even before she married Prince Charles that July. Not long after the two announced their engagement, Diana wore a black gown by David and Elizabeth Emanuel (who went on to design her wedding dress) to a fundraising concert on March 9âCharles and Dianaâs first public engagement together.

Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer on March 9, 1981.Credit: Getty
After seeing Diana in the off-the-shoulder taffeta ensemble, Charles told his soon-to-be wife, âOnly people in mourning wear black!â She wore it anyway.
Speaking to Hello!, Azagury noted that, nearly three decades after her death in a Paris car crash on August 31, 1997, Diana âis still incredibly present, whichever way you look at it.â

Princess Diana wearing Jacques Azagury on July 1, 1997.Credit: Getty
âPeople are still constantly talking about her and her life,â he added. âShe truly was a phenomenon, the likes of which we will not see again for a very long time, if ever.â
He continued, âI just feel incredibly privileged and luckyâit is still a bit of a âpinch meâ moment. When I think of all the designers across the world who were clamoring to dress her, the fact that she still chose to come to me was the ultimate reward for my career.â
on InStyle
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ