Tamara Green Orchid Fascinator
$395.00Tamara is a headband fascinator featuring lush orchids. Delightful and vivid, Tamara is sure to turn heads anywhere she appears.
Only one available.
Tamara is a headband fascinator featuring lush orchids. Delightful and vivid, Tamara is sure to turn heads anywhere she appears.
Only one available.
Kail is a handblocked hat with ivory, white, navy and emerald green tones. Navy ribbon around the edge gives this hat definition and style. A fabulous spray of navy feathers gives Kail movement and elegance.
Only one available.
Whirlaway was named after the great horse of the same name. Pink dogwoods rise to the occasion, much like the namesake of this fascinator. Whirlaway was the 5th U.S Triple Crown Champion in 1941. Sired by English Derby winner, Blenheim, he holds the record of the longest winning margin in the Kentucky Derby.
Camellia is a dark green wool fedora, highlighted with wine hydrangeas and dancing green feathers. I love these fedoras because they keep you warm while providing style!
Named after the camellia sinensis plant, which is the basis for black, green and white teas. It is native to Southeast Asia.
The Anmer hat was designed in a style often worn by the late Queen. The asymmetrical crown gives height. Bright lime orchids trim the The Anmer. Polly designed this with vivid colors to stand out in any crowd.
This hat runs small. It fits a small head, 22″.
The Anmer is named after Anmer Hall, on the grounds of Sandringham. It was a wedding gift from the late Queen Elizabeth II to Prince William and Princess Catherine.
Only one available.
Sunday Silence is a hand made sculpted ivory hat trimmed in a romantic style. A collection of flowers add style and timeless appeal to a hat that can be worn to tea, the races, church or a wedding. Only one available.
This hat is a part of my fall collection for White House Black Market. The Adlestrop is a navy, wool fedora with jewel toned feathers and a velvet orchid, making this a quintessential and an unforgettable hat for the fall season.
The architecture in Adlestrop is pure Cotswold; lovely golden stone cottages, hedges all around and trailing vines across the door. This is the kind of place that first-time visitors to Britain imagine all English villages are like. A quiet lane or two, a thatched village store, an old Rectory and manor house on either side of the parish church and a wide green with footpaths leading here and there across a countryside of green fields and stone walls, hedgerows and rolling hills.