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The making of Kate Middleton’s wedding dress

The making of Kate Middleton's wedding dress

Prince William and Catherine Middleton travel from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace

Catherine Middleton left the world breathless when she stepped out of her car in front of Westminster Abbey on Friday, giving the first glimpse of her couture Alexander McQueen wedding dress.

Members of the public will have to wait several months before they get a closer look at the gown when it goes on display in London, but new details about how Catherine kept the design a secret have emerged.

In pictures: Prince William weds Catherine Middleton

As soon as the engagement was announced, Catherine reportedly started looking for a designer. Settling on Sarah Burton from Alexander McQueen, she conducted the initial design meetings over the internet on Skype.

Later, fittings took place in secret in William and Catherine’s rented farm house in Anglesey, Wales.

Even the embroiderers from the Royal School of Needlework were not told which bride would wear the handcrafted lace they were painstakingly working on.

At least 12 people crafted the lace the dress was made from, with the workforce aged between 19 and 70. They were required to wash their hands every 30 minutes to keep the lace clean, and changed needles every three hours to ensure their work was perfect.

“We’ve all enjoyed the experience,” one of the Royal School of Needlework’s embroiderers told the UK’s Daily Mail. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance. We’ve worked as a team and we are pleased with the response to the dress.

“It makes it worth all the years of training as an embroiderer.”

Once the lace was delivered, Sarah set her seamstresses to work on different sections of the gown. They were forbidden to talk to each other so no one but Sarah and Catherine knew the full design.

All work was completed in a locked room at the Alexander McQueen headquarters in Clerkenwell, with seamstresses being smuggled in each night under cover of darkness to avoid arousing suspicion amongst regular staff.

Once the delicate hand-sewing was complete, the sections of the gown were sent Buckingham Palace, where Sarah stitched them together in a special locked work room just days before the big day.

Related: Pippa Middleton dubbed ‘Her Royal Hotness’

The completed gown spent a few nights under lock and key at Clarence House, before being moved to the Goring Hotel the night before the wedding.

Catherine’s dress is expected to go on display in Kensington Palace or the Victoria and Albert Museum. It might also appear at Buckingham Palace as early as next month.

Your say: Are you surprised Kate Middleton had to go to such lengths to keep her dress secret?

Video: Putting together The Weekly’s royal issue

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Should Rob Lowe be forgiven?

Should Rob Lowe be forgiven?

Rob Lowe on the red carpet, and on the cover of the May 2011 issue of Vanity Fair

Rob Lowe appears buff and topless on the cover of the May issue of Vanity Fair magazine, looking like the perfect sex symbol.

But in 1988, Lowe was embroiled in a sex scandal so sordid it almost ended his career for good.

Scandalous: Celebrity playboy Shane Warne

Lowe was filmed having sex with two women, one of whom was 16. He claimed he didn’t know the girl was underage at the time.

Another part of the same video showed Lowe and a male friend having sex with another young American model in a hotel room in Paris. This portion of the tape was sold as one of the first celebrity sex tapes, destroying Lowe’s public image.

The actor checked himself into rehab for sex addiction and alcoholism soon afterwards, and his career eventually rebounded.

He has since poked fun at his sex tapes on US sketch show Saturday Night Live.

Related: Rob Lowe still looks good with his shirt off

Now, Lowe is 47, back on top and being marketed as a sexy leading man. In his Vanity Fair interview, he says he as “no regrets” about his troubled past.

“The Brat Pack is timeless,” Lowe told the publication. “We should all be so lucky in our lives to create things that we’re still talking about 25 years later.”

Your say: Do you think Rob Lowe and other troubled celebrities should be forgiven for their past indiscretions?

Video: The biggest scandals of the decade

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Some trans fats could improve heart health

Some trans fats could improve heart health

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Trans fats are bad for you, right? Yes — and no.

Trans fats (those fats that are a by-product of the manufacture of partially hydrogenated vegetable oils and that are used in some margarines and commercial baked goods) have had plenty of bad press over the past few years, being linked with a variety of inflammatory conditions, such as heart disease and diabetes.

However, a type of natural trans fat found in whole milk, cheese, yoghurt and butter, called trans-palmitoleic acid (TPA), may have the opposite effect.

In pictures: Low-fat and delicious recipes

Researchers at Harvard University’s Public School of Health tracked 3736 men and women over a period of 20 years, and evaluated their risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as levels of blood glucose, insulin, and fatty acids.

At the end of the study, those participants who had the highest blood levels of TPA had healthier levels of blood cholesterol and insulin, lower inflammatory markers, and a 60 percent reduction in their risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

Video: Train your tastebuds to enjoy healthy food

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Fructose linked to gout

Fructose linked to gout

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By Pamela Allardice

You already know the risks of consuming too much fructose. It’s usually found in the form of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which is added to many processed foods, sweetened fruit juices and soft drinks, as well as to sauces and condiments. And an increasing body of research has already linked it to obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, to name a few.

Now a study of more than 78,000 women, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association has also found that an increased intake of fructose-rich beverages — which was defined in the research as being one serving per day — is also linked to a 76 percent higher risk of gout among women.

In pictures: Ten bad things that are actually good for you

The researchers suggest that this effect is probably due to the fact that fructose can increase serum uric acid levels, which is a trigger for the disease.

Video: Train your tastebuds to enjoy healthy food

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Review: Thor

Review: Thor

Thor is the latest Marvel superhero movie to hit our screens and what a force of special effects to be hit with. The movie has a surprisingly fine array of talent, including Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins and Rene Russo, with Kenneth Branagh as director.

The film opens on the dark plains of the US, where a cosmic disturbance drops Thor (Aussie Chris Hemsworth) onto our unsuspecting astrophysicists. We are thrown into a flashback and another galaxy, where Thor’s tale is told: He is a headstrong young heir to the throne of Asgard who is keen to throw his hammer around and take on the Frost Giants.

Movies: Rabbit Hole review

The fight scenes feature some brilliant special effects with giants who can spout ice and a Thor wields a hammer that can bend earth. But it all comes to an early end thanks to Odin, regally played by Anthony Hopkins, who banishes him to a hellish place called Earth to learn some manners (he obviously hasn’t done his research).

All humour takes place on modern-day Earth, with “fish out of water” comedy. Thor is stun-gunned, hit by a four-wheel drive twice and strides into a pet shop and says “I need a horse”. His buddies and jealous brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston) try to change Odin’s mind but things take a turn for the worst and Loki ends up on the throne. But Thor has a few twists that are more biblical than understandable.

There are too many undeveloped characters, as if they are being introduced in preparation for a sequel or two (stay tuned). Thor’s cohorts are lifted straight from the comic book and given glib lines, while Rene Russo (who plays Thor’s mother) has even less to do. Hopkins sleepwalks through this role — and still impresses — which is ironic given Odin spends half the movie sleeping.

Portman shines and grabs every moment and Chris Hemsworth manages his Shakespearean delivery and transition from ego-driven war monger to comical humble hero quite well. You still suspect he is cast more for his height, looks and incredible body than his acting skills, but he does have talent.

Kat Dennings (Darcy) and Stellan Skarsgard (Dr Erik Selvig) are the strongest of the supporting cast.

Related: Chris Hemsworth on his role in Thor

Director Branagh has seized on the central brotherly love story as the driving force, let the special effects work their magic, and paid little attention to anything else. The romance is only carried by the acting talents of Portman and I’m still wondering why they bothered with 3-D. There is next to nothing that warrants it.

But this is still a movie with heart, some great fight scenes and brilliant special effects that will dazzle your vision and you will feel rumble through your seat. The problem is, once you leave it, there is little else that will resonate for much longer.

Your say: Why do you think comic book movies have been so popular in recent years?

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Scarlett Johansson ditches blonde for fiery red

Scarlett Johansson ditches blonde for fiery red

Scarlett Johansson is now scarlet in more ways than one — the actress showed off her new bright red hair at an event over the weekend.

The 26-year-old actress is normally blonde, but has dyed her tresses a fiery red. She debuted her new look at the White House Correspondents’ party in Washington DC on Saturday night.

In pictures: Million dollar bodies

Scarlett seemed proud of her new locks, spending longer than average on the red carpet outside the event, posing for photographers.

The last time Scarlett had red hair was in 2009, when she dyed it for her role as the Black Widow in Iron Man 2. She is reprising the role in 2011 film The Avengers, which is the reason she has dyed her hair red again.

In pictures: Guess the celebrity tattoo

Scarlett separated from her husband Ryan Reynolds last year and is currently dating Sean Penn, 50.

Your say: Do you think Scarlett looks better as a blonde or a redhead?

Video: Scarlett Johansson moves in with Sean Penn?

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Alexander McQueen ‘haunting’ friends

Alexander McQueen 'haunting' friends

Left: Alexander McQueen; right: Sarah Burton

The woman behind Catherine Middleton’s wedding dress reportedly believes her late mentor Alexander McQueen is speaking to her from beyond the grave.

Sarah Burton was McQueen’s protégé, and took over his fashion house after his suicide in February, 2010. Sarah, who designed both of Catherine’s wedding dresses and Pippa’s much-admired bridesmaid gown, is one of several people who reportedly believe McQueen is still communicating with them.

In pictures: Prince William and Catherine Middleton wed

Kristin Knox, author of Alexander McQueen: Genius of a Generation, has detailed the eerie occurrences many of McQueen’s friends reportedly attribute to his spirit trying to contact them.

Knox says Sarah Burton believes McQueen contacted her last year, several months after his death. She was working in her London studio when a crow flew into the window, killing itself. Knox claims Burton and her team are convinced it was a message from McQueen, who loved using feathers in his designs.

Knox also reports that people have felt McQueen’s presence in the last two Alexander McQueen fashion shows.

“I do think fashion people are naturally superstitious and definitely very spiritual, much more so than any other industry,” Knox told the New York Post.

“Any time someone in the innermost recesses of the fashion world passes away, especially someone with a godlike status and where the death concerned is a tragic one, will spawn tales of his followers, co-workers and friends claiming his spirit remains with him.”

Pop star Lady Gaga was very close to McQueen, and has frequently claimed he is communicating with her from beyond the grave. She says he “wrote” her latest single ‘Born This Way’ through her.

“I think he’s up in heaven with fashion strings in his hands, ‘marionetting’ away, planning this whole thing,” Gaga told the UK’s Harper’s Bazaar last month.

Even Knox has experienced an eerie incident relating to McQueen. She believes he ‘approved’ her book about him even before she started writing it.

“I was in New York for Fashion Week in February,” she said. “When I heard the news about his passing, I felt strangely compelled to visit his store and pay my final respects.

“The atmosphere in the shop was beyond eerie, it was more like a tomb or a shrine than a store, which was deadly silent, with only 10 people allowed in at once. Candles were burning and people were weeping.”

Related: Catherine Middleton chooses an Alexander McQueen dress

The next morning, Knox received an email from a publishing house, asking if she wanted to write a book in tribute to the designer.

“I couldn’t shake the feeling that somehow he had chosen, or at least approved, me to pen his tribute,” she said.

Your say: Have you had any eerie experiences with ghosts or spirits?

Video: Catherine Middleton arrives at Westminster Abbey

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The Weekly’s royal wedding issue

The Weekly's royal wedding commemorative issue

The Weekly's royal wedding commemorative issue

Continuing a long tradition of providing unrivalled coverage of royal weddings through the decades, this special edition of The Weekly will be a collector’s item not to be missed.

Featuring more than 50 pages of photos and reports direct from London plus all the behind-the-scenes stories from William and Catherine’s big day, the commemorative issue will be on sale around the nation at all the usual outlets.

The Weekly team has been working tirelessly to get the best possible royal wedding souvenir issue out as quickly as possible, and while we are running ahead of schedule, the quick turnaround could still bring some delays.

The royal wedding commemorative issue will be available in the Eastern states on Wednesday but there may be delays in South Australia and Western Australia with deliveries expected to arrive between Wednesday and Friday May 6 at the latest.

For our loyal subscribers, magazines will be in the post on Wednesday, causing a slightly late arrival, but rest assured there has been no compromise in quality and the best possible royal wedding coverage will arrive in your mailbox as soon as possible.

To complete your collection and to ensure you have a Royal Wedding memento worthy of a king, a sumptuous, 116-page Australian Women’s Weekly commemorative royal wedding book goes on sale on May 20.

Video: Putting together The Weekly’s royal issue

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Send your message to Prince William and Kate Middleton!

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Do you have a message of congratulations for the newly wed Prince William and Kate Middleton? Send it to us and we will pass it on directly to the couple!

The entire Woman’s Day team have gone to great lengths to bring you a beautiful royal wedding album, so that it can become a gorgeous keepsake in your family for years to come.

Along with your messages of congratulations, we will also be sending the newly titled couple a copy of our special royal Woman’s Day issue to add to the memories of their special day!

Write your messages to Prince William and Kate Middleton in the comments space below.

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Prince William and Harry: Brothers in arms

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There’s no doubt William and Harry’s mother, Diana, would have been proud of her boys.

But as his big brother William took his last walk as a single man down the aisle at Westminster Abbey, it was Harry, not the groom, who seemed overwhelmed by the pomp and pageantry of the occasion.

While William smiled and chatted to Middleton family members as he waited for his bride to arrive, Harry tugged at the collar of his Captain of the Household Cavalry uniform and nervously fidgeted in his spurred shoes.

As Kate made her way to the altar, fanfared by a choir and trumpeters, the red-headed larrikin returned to form, wise-cracking, “There’s no backing out now” to his beloved big brother.

Read more and see all of the stunning pictures in the special royal issue of Woman’s Day on sale Sunday May 1.

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