The Duchess is used to mixing high street garments with designer accessories and high-end items.
In fact, she was photographed with the same Zara dress in January 2020.
Back then, Prince William and his wife were visiting Bradford for their first engagement of the year.
Middleton’s Zara dress was slightly more expensive when it first arrived on the racks (£95 as reported by Insider) but was already on sale at £26 when The Duchess first wore it.
The piece sold out shortly after thanks to the Kate effect.
She mixed the elegant black and white dress with a bespoke military-style Alexander McQueen dark green coat, £500 suede stilettos designed by Gianvito Rossi and a £570 crocodile handbag from Aspinal of London.
The Duchess' fans praised her online for her elegance like Maria Luiza (@marialu18985296) who said "Kate Middleton once again shows off her elegance with a timeless dress" on Twitter. "Kate Middleton shines on her own" added Katarzyna Knapik (@TwoTower83).
More than 2,000 liked a tweet from desperate UCL Professor Vivian Hill (@VivianEdPsych) who saw all her students leave their seat to stare at the window. "This is what happens when the Duchess of Cambridge visits the university while you are teaching" she tweeted.
READ MORE: Queen urged to 'hand over' royal role to Kate as Duchess dazzles
The fashion industry is the second-largest polluter in the world, just after the oil industry, with mass producers like Zara’s parent company Inditex at the forefront of the dramatic ecological impact.
Toronto Star’s fashion writer Sarah Laing mentioned in a column in 2020 that Kate’s taste for Zara, Topshop and Asos should be put into perspective.
“While Kate’s Zara dress is purported to be made from ‘at least’ 50 per cent viscose, a fabric made from wood pulp sourced from ‘more sustainably managed forests,’ and produced in facilities that Zara says adhere to ‘stringent’ European Union guidelines on waste and emission reduction, it’s still fast fashion,” she wrote.
“It’s still part of the endless cycle of buying enabled by accessible price points and fuelled by fad-chasing and the delusion that clothes are meant to be worn for a season and then discarded.”
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