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Prince William and Catherine Middleton wed

Prince William and Catherine Middleton exchanged vows in London’s Westminster Abbey in front of 1900 guests today.

Catherine wore a long-sleeved lace Alexander McQueen dress, with a long train and deep v-neck.

See all the photos, from the bride arriving, to the romantic balcony kiss, here. Long live William and Catherine.

David and Victoria Beckham

Elton John and David Furnish

Prince Harry’s on/off girlfriend Chelsy Davy

British Prime Minister David Cameron’s fashionable wife Samantha

British film director Guy Ritchie

Prince William and Prince Harry arrive at Westminster Abbey

Prince Charles and Camilla

Princess Anne

Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie

http://cdn.assets.cougar.bauer-media.net.au/s3/digital-cougar-assets/AWW/2013/09/05/3861/generic_recipe_img4.jpg

Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall

Catherine’s mother Carole Middleton

Princess Anne’s daughter Zara Phillips

William and Harry walk up the aisle

The flower girls and page boys arrive

Catherine’s sister and maid of honour Pippa Middleton leads flower girls into the abbey

Queen Elizabeth greets the Archbishop of Canterbury

Catherine Middleton arrives with her father Michael

Catherine arrives at the Abbey

Catherine grins to the crowds

Catherine and her father enter Westminster Abbey

Catherine joins Prince William at the altar

Prince William placing a gold ring on Catherine’s finger

The new couple sing a hymn

Catherine and William during the ceremony

William and Catherine walk back up the aisle as Duke and Duchess of Cambridge

William and Catherine leave Westminster Abbey

William and Catherine greet crowds outside the abbey

William and Catherine leave the abbey

Michael and Carole Middleton leave the abbey

William and Catherine in the carriage on the way to Buckingham Palace

Prince Harry jokes with the flower girls in the carriage to Buckingham Palace

Catherine smiling at wellwishers

William and Catherine wave from the balcony of Buckingham Palace

Balcony kiss number one

Balcony kiss number two

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Top trends from Australian Fashion Week

Top trends from Australian Fashion Week

Left: Arnsdorf; Centre: Lisa Ho; Right: Bec & Bridge. © Katherine Lowe

Australian Fashion Week has come to a close, and with it we have no doubt about what we’ll be wearing this coming summer.

While Australian designers don’t particularly set the trends on the international stage, instead taking inspiration from their European counterparts (from the bright colour-blocking of Jil Sander to the minimalism of Celine), they have undoubtedly cemented the trends we saw at the latest spring-summer collections in Paris, Milan and New York for use in our own backyard.

In pictures: The top trends from Australian Fashion Week

Though there were plenty of mini-trends scattered throughout the collections, like paper-bag waists, soft leather (in the form of skirts, shorts, dresses and tops), oriental inspired prints, wide pants, linen and the colour orange, there were five stand-out looks that were hard to ignore.

Mile-high club

While attention of the upper leg area is usually reserved for miniskirts, sky-high slits in ankle-length dresses, knee-length skirts and palazzo pants have ensured there is a new focus on our thighs this summer. This trend is great news for more mature women who want to show a bit of leg without bearing all.

Colouring in

Bright, block-colours were seen all over the catwalk this week, but they were also spotted on all the front-row fashion editors, proving that mixing bold, colourful separates is a trend not going anywhere fast. However, make sure you stick to one colour palette when combining your statement pieces — rust, burnt orange and mustard give a strong effect when worn together, as do jewelled hues of teal, gold, and chartreuse, or if you’re felling really brave go for bright colours of aqua, watermelon pink and lime.

In pictures: The top trends from Australian Fashion Week

White wash

Most shows this week opened with beautifully crafted white, cream and ivory pieces that reflected the minimalism and simplicity of Paris’ Celine and Chloe. Although extremely difficult to keep clean, these classic pieces are an easy way to perfect effortless chic in a country famous for its cut-off denim shorts during summer. If all white is too daunting, invest in a crisp white shirt or silk cream blouse to take you through summer.

Modern romance

Probably the least appealing trend to a fashion realist is romance. All the ruffles, floaty shapes and lace look gorgeous on the catwalk, but what about in real life? Our designers, however, seemed to seamlessly blend modernity and romance, making it a wearable style that I’m sure we’ll all fall head over heels in love with. Think ethereal chiffon skirts, fluid silk pants and dreamy free-flowing dresses perfect for any number of summer soirees.

Jumpsuits

The jumpsuit will continue to reign as a summer staple, however this season designers left the boho behind and embraced simple, well cut all-in-ones for a sexier, grown-up feel that will make you want to put up with their only downside — the slow powder-room pit stops.

Related: Yasmin Le Bon at Australian Fashion Week

Your say: Can you see yourself embracing any of the trends from Australian Fashion Week?

Video: Top trends from Australian Fashion Week

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At home with Karl Stefanovic

At home with Karl Stefanovic

The Gold Logie winner discusses love, family and how he nearly ended up in the Australian cricket team.

It’s the darndest thing. You wake up with someone every morning and you think you know them. Then BAM! Out of the blue, you discover something that changes everything — and explains so much.

Related: Lisa Wilkinson on being Lisa

Karl Stefanovic, the genial bloke who fronts the Today show, is for many of us the first face we see when we get out of bed.

For the past four months, we’ve been letting him into our living rooms so he can inform us about the tsunami devastation in Japan, the cyclone and flood havoc in Queensland and the earthquake disaster in Christchurch.

For the past six years, he’s been fronting Today, gravely conducting interviews with prime ministers before crossing to a segment on next season’s summer fashion must-haves. Yet how well do we really know this man?

Did you know, for example, that instead of voting for “Karl Stefanovic: Journalist and Today Show Presenter” at this year’s Logie Awards, we could all just as easily have been voting for “Karl Stefanovic — Most Popular Actor”? Or if fate had skewed differently, we might have spent the summer watching him face down the English bowling attack as opening batsman for Australia in The Ashes series?

Before he threw his professional lot in with this TV journalism caper, a young Karl Stefanovic auditioned for and was very nearly accepted into the country’s most prestigious acting course at the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA).

At around the same time, he was playing representative schoolboy cricket for Queensland, opening the state’s batting order and sharing the wicket with the likes of Michael Kasprowicz and Andrew Symonds.

His on-air colleague, Lisa Wilkinson, jokes that Karl has 24 different personalities and she never knows which one she is going to be sitting next to from one day to the next.

“There’s more than a hint of showman in Karl,” says Lisa. “More like a great big brush stroke. One of the great things about him is you never quite know what he is going to do next. I probably know him as well as anybody, but I’m often poised on the edge of my seat wondering what he’s going to do or say.”

And then there’s Karl’s wife Cassie — shrewd, smart, sassy Cassie. She has wit and charm the equal of her man and — perhaps most importantly — keeps his ego in check.

While posing together during The Weekly photo shoot, Cassie, 40, chides her husband for his vanity. “Look at, me Karl, not at the camera,” she mocks as he stares down the lens like a Myer catalogue model.

For Cassie, an accomplished journalist in her own right, playing her part in the building of Brand Stefanovic has not always been easy. There have been sacrifices along the way.

“The first 12 months we were in LA, Karl was on the road for eight of them,” Cassie remembers. “I was pregnant with Ava. I remember one morning waking up with awful morning sickness and barely being able to get out of bed. Jackson was four years old and could see his mummy was sick and said, ‘If Daddy doesn’t want to be the daddy anymore, I’ll be the daddy’. It broke my heart.”

Lisa Wilkinson says Cassie and her own husband, author and journalist Peter FitzSimons, constitute a “two-person club” effectively widowed by the Today show. Robin describes Cassie as “the steel that supports Karl” and Alan Jones ascribes a good part of Karl’s success to her.

“She is a smart, straightforward woman,” he says. “If Karl ever got tickets on himself, Cassie would bring him back down to earth straight away. I’m always telling Karl she’s the one with the real strength and ability.”

Related: Karl Stefanovic wins the Gold Logie

Now the proud mother of Jackson, 11, Ava, six, and River, four, Cassie has no regrets about the way things have turned out.

“I’d like to go back to work at some stage, but I’m not about to unravel the whole family,” she says. “Karl is obviously really busy at the moment and I don’t feel like I’m putting everything to one side at all. This is the right thing for our family at the moment.

“And so we are all playing our roles in that. If Karl is going to be away a lot, then it’s my job to be here for the kids.”

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think Karl Stefanovic deserved to win the Gold Logie?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

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Suri beats SJP as best dressed

She is barely out of nappies and according to recent pictures still sucks a dummy, but that doesn’t make Suri Cruise any less stylish.

The five-year-old daughter to Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise has come in at number 21 in Glamour magazine’s best-dressed women poll for 2011.

Suri has beaten the likes of reality TV star Kim Kardashian, Sex and the City star Sarah Jessica Parker and singer Lady Gaga in the poll, which is voted for by readers.

Harry Potter star Emma Watson took out the top spot, but if her style continues to evolve Suri should be at the of the list before long!

Suri Cruise and Sarah Jessica Parker

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

Stylish Suri Cruise

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Brad Pitt has dinner with Courteney Cox

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Despite his bitter break-up with Jennifer Aniston, Brad Pitt has been spotted having dinner with Jen’s best buddy, Courteney Cox.

The pair were reunited out at dinner together on Wednesday night in West Hollywood at a birthday celebration for Cynthia Pett-Dante, who manages both of them, Us magazine reported.

So was there any bad blood between them? An unnamed source told the magazine that the pair were “happy to see each other”.

“Brad was the first to arrive and he hung out at the bar, grabbed a cocktail and sort of chatted with patrons. Nice as ever,” the unnamed source said.

“[They] looked happy to see one another, like old friends. They huddled for a good five minutes, like they were catching up.

“They were very sweet to each other. He gave her a big hug.”

Missing in action was Brad’s partner, Angelina Jolie. Courteney, who is currently on a trial separation from her husband, David Arquette, also arrived alone.

The dinner party, which was held at Eva Longoria’s restaurant, Beso, saw guests feast on tacos, flatbreads, guacamole and salad.

After the meal, Brad and Courteney parted ways with Brad accompanying the rest of the group to the Ford Theatre for American rocker Chris Cornell’s concert, while Courteney headed home to her six-year-old daughter, Coco.

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Melinda Schneider does Doris Day

Melinda Schneider does Doris Day

Country music star Melinda Schneider

Melinda Schneider is one of Australia’s most successful country music singers, but for the next few months, she has devoted herself to jazz.

The six-time Golden Guitar Award winner has written her own stage show about 1950s singer and actress Doris Day.

Titled, Doris — So Much More Than the Girl Next Door the show looks at the turbulent life of the Hollywood icon, who is still one of the top-ranking box office performers of all time.

In pictures: Eight easy ways to boost your confidence

Melinda puts her acclaimed voice to good use, belting out Doris’ biggest hits and a few of her own.

Here, Melinda talks about her lifelong love affair with Doris and why she has never been more glad she appeared in Dancing with the Stars.

Why Doris Day?

I’ve been interested in Doris since I was a little kid. The very first film I ever saw was Calamity Jane, and I was hooked. She’s one of the best movie stars of all time. She was so talented, singing dancing and acting — she’s so brilliant at all three of those things which is pretty rare.

How did you get involved in this show?

It’s my idea. It’s my baby. I’ve written the script with a great writer called David Mitchell. Last year I released my album, called ‘Melinda does Doris’ and the natural progression was to do a show as well. It’s been a dream of mine for years and it’s taken quite a while to get off the ground, but I’m really excited to be opening here in Brisbane.

So it’s opening night, you walk out onto the stage — what happens next?

We tell the story of Doris’ life, from the beginning, when she was 13 and heading to Hollywood to be a dancer. She’s had a lot of tragedies in her life. She had four terrible marriages, her car was hit by a train when she was on her way to Hollywood for her dancing career and her legs were crushed.

The doctors thought she may never walk again, let alone dance. That’s when she discovered that she could sing. Fate has played a huge part in Doris’ life. We touch on that, we touch on the fact that she is a huge animal lover and animal activist, as am I. We have a lot of similarities, a lot of parallels in our lives, Doris and I.

You sing a lot of Doris’ biggest hits in the show — is there anything of yourself in it?

My dogs are actually in the show! They just sit there and look beautiful. I sing them one of my songs. There are a couple of my original songs in the show, including one I’ve written for my dogs called ‘Your Eyes Could Never Lie’.

Have you been brushing up your dance moves?

Last year I was on Dancing with the Stars and that dance training has definitely come in handy for this show because there’s a lot of dancing in it!

What can people expect from your show?

Country fans, I think you’ll love it and people who love Doris Day and love jazz will also love it. There will be great music, sequins, dancing and great stories — what’s not to love?

Related: Melinda Schneider learns to be herself

Doris — So Much More Than the Girl Next Door, opened at Brisbane’s Twelfth Night Theatre last night. The show will move to South Australia for the Adelaide Cabaret Festival from June 10 to 25 before touring nationally.

Video: Melinda Schneider

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A guide to sniffing out the best coffee

A guide to sniffing out the best coffee

Coffee is known for its intoxicating aroma, but not many people realise that one sniff can tell you everything from whether you’ll enjoy the blend, to what time of the day you should drink it.

Australian fragrance expert Clint Dowdell has been working with Nespresso to educate people about the importance of taking time out to sniff your coffee before you guzzle it.

In pictures: Mood foods

Clint has come up with four key things anyone can find out about their favourite blends by simple smelling them.

Quality

The aroma of a coffee blend speaks volumes about the quality of the beans. Poor quality blends will have a one-dimensional scent that can smell stale or otherwise unappetising. Good quality coffee has a rich aroma with many different notes that leaves your mouth watering and your hands fumbling for your spare change.

“Like anything, like a good fragrance, you can actually smell the quality of the ingredients,” Clint says. “With an inferior quality perfume, half an hour after you spray it on you can’t smell it any more, or it smells different or sour.

“It’s the same thing with coffee. If the beans aren’t of exceptional quality, the flavour doesn’t resonate in the mouth, you don’t have that beautiful follow-through. The aftertaste is wrong and it doesn’t smell right either.”

Time of day

A quick sniff can also tell you what time of day a coffee is perfect for. Bitter blends are more suited to early morning, while coffees with floral notes are good for afternoon and evening consumption.

“The scent is great for picking coffee to suit the mood you’re in, or the time of day,” Clint says. “In the morning, you might want a slap-in-the-face jolt to wake you up, so you’d go for the bitter, dark chocolate scents.

“But if it’s mid-afternoon, or a Sunday morning and you’re after something a bit more gentle, you look for other smells, like jasmine and orange blossoms and fruity aromas, soft and subtle notes.”

No experience necessary

Clint has worked in the fragrance industry for years, but says you don’t need any training to pick the right type of coffee for you.

“It’s very easy for people who are educated to really get into fragrances and perfumes, but when it comes to coffee, the layman is just as qualified,” Clint says.

“If you have three coffees sitting there, you can walk up and sniff them and if you enjoy the smell, you’re going to enjoy the coffee.

“You don’t need any information about what the different notes mean, or how they indicate quality. If you like it, you like it — you don’t need a degree to tell you that.”

Stop and smell the beans

Coffee is powerfully associated with aroma, but Clint says most people have forgotten the art of savouring the smell of their morning cup. He advises every coffee-lover to take time out to sniff every cup to get the most out of their coffee.

“The smell of coffee is something we often waste,” Clint says. “To me, it’s like walking through an art gallery with your eyes shut. To smell it, and enjoy that moment, can really enhance your experience.”

Tickets: Good Food and Wine Show

Your say: Does the aroma of coffee play a part in your enjoyment of your morning blend?

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How Jesse James told Sandra about his affair

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Jesse James has described the moment that he told his now ex-wife Sandra Bullock about his affair, saying that Sandra’s “small body shook with sobs” as he told her.

The new details of the couple’s well-publicised split have been revealed in Jesse’s new memoir, American Outlaw.

Us magazine has released part of the 42-year-old’s memoir in which he tells of the moment he came clean to his Oscar-winning wife of six years in the office of his motorcycle repair shop, West Coast Choppers.

“I admitted the affair,” James wrote.

“I told her the hard details. I let her know that I had never loved this woman [Michelle ‘Bombshell’ McGee], that I had never cared for her at all.

“The feeling of shame and sadness that washed over me as Sandy began to cry was almost beyond measure … I didn’t touch her. I sat frozen in my chair, watching, as Sandy’s small body shook with sobs.”

James revealed that before he told his then wife about his affair he first received a call from her publicist warning that McGee was about to sell her story to a tabloid.

The reality TV star wrote that after he confessed to his then wife, Sandra “rose to her feet … unfolded her sunglasses and put them on her face … She walked steadily and purposefully to the front of the shop, opened the heavy, metal door. For a moment, the sunlight enveloped her. The door closed behind her, and she was gone.”

He also wrote about how he explained Sandra’s sudden disappearance to his young daughter, seven-year-old Sunny.

“I chew my lip as I consider my answer. Well, sweetie, the truth is, I have no idea. Daddy f—ed up, real, real bad, so your step-mummy decided to disappear for a few weeks,” he wrote.

He also revealed that Sandra and Sunny haven’t seen each other in months and that he hasn’t seen Louis Bardo, the little boy Sandra adopted, since “everything happened”.

James, who is now engaged to LA Ink star Kat Von D, has shown no remorse for writing about the very public split. He told Good Morning America it was time to make himself happy.

“I can’t worry about her anymore,” he said in the interview.

“I think I spent a lot of the past five or six years worrying about her … It’s time to make sure I’m happy.”

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Cameron Diaz reveals her new health and exercise regime

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Cameron shows off her guns.

Cameron Diaz has said she has never worried about her weight or what she eats, but what’s the reason behind her new gym junkie attitude and refusal to eating fried foods?

The 38-year-old actress has opened up to Elle magazine about her new diet and exercise regime saying that in order to pursue her new heavy lifting gym schedule and stay small she needed to change her diet.

She revealed that she “curls at 15 [reps] and is pressing at 25” as part of her new exercise regime and as the pictures above show, her hard work is paying off.

“I love it. I have never, ever watched what I eat in my life, but I do now,” she said.

“I’m off the fried foods. I’m very thoughtful about what I eat. If you’re gonna do heavy lifting, and you want to stay small, you have to watch what you eat.

“You have to give your body the right nutrients and really think about what’s best for it.”

Although the actress has always been active and has said that she loves playing sport, the influence of her active boyfriend Alex Rodriguez is certainly part of her newfound love of the gym.

During the interview the actress also confirmed, what has long been suspected, that she and the 35-year-old New York Yankees player were indeed a couple.

“Yes, Alex is my boyfriend. It’s not a secret anymore,” she said.

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Why modern women can’t find love

Why modern women can't find love

Women are neglecting their ‘feminine side’, says Australia’s longest-serving matchmaker.

Yvonne Allen, who started her agency in the 1970s, has told The Australian Women’s Weekly that modern women are losing the skills of attracting and keeping love.

They are also too fussy, and are demanding perfection from men even though they are far from perfect themselves, she says.

“In 36 years, I’ve witnessed huge changes,” Yvonne says. “The things that have been happening with women — there are huge changes, the business professional women are a very different being.

“I think we’ve taken on a Maggie Thatcher-style model in terms of doing things like a man and beating them at their own game,” she tells this month’s magazine.

“With the focus on that, we’ve often not tended to the feminine aspects. Certainly the way we operate as men and women has changed and our expectations are so high … there could be the ideal man in front of them and they’re not recognising him.”

Romantic comedies, magazines and books have given women an unrealistic idea of love and relationships, Yvonne says.

“A lot of women who are really lonely are lonely because of how they think they should be … People look at each other often to see what’s missing rather than seeing what’s there.”

Some also demand high standards from a partner but fail to ask what they could bring to the relationship.

“We had a woman recently, 46, demanding to meet a man who wants children,” says Yvonne. “Not realising a man who wants to have children is not going to want to meet a 46-year-old.”

Yvonne is so concerned about this that she intends to start workshops to teach women how to get in touch with their feminine side.

Her tips include taking a break between work and a date so you don’t arrive in corporate/mother mode. Another is to avoid having specific “shopping lists”, and be realistic about what you’re bringing to the table.

Where women go wrong in the dating game:

Arriving at dates in work/mother mode. Try to take a break or change outfits so you don’t take the day with you.

Holding high expectations. Unrealistic expectations will end in disappointment.

Having specific “shopping lists”. Ask yourself how lists are going to make a relationship work.

Failing to look at what you’re taking to the table. What needs of your own are you expecting him to meet and are you being realistic about that?

Failing to understand that, rightly or wrongly, men judge women on their sexual behaviour.

Demanding constant proof of his affection. Men don’t function like women and if he doesn’t call every day, it’s not a reflection on how much he cares.

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think modern women are neglecting their femininity? Tell us more at [email protected]

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