The First Official Portrait Featuring King Charles, Queen Consort Camilla and Prince and Princess of Wales Released

Official royal portrait

Buckingham Palace has shared a new image of the quartet, which was taken the night before Queen Elizabeth's funeral last month. Photo: Reuters

The first official portrait of King Charles, Queen Consort Camilla, and the Prince and Princess of Wales has been released.

Buckingham Palace has shared a new image of the quartet, which was taken the night before Queen Elizabeth’s funeral last month, hours before the four most senior members of the royal family hosted a reception for Heads of State at Buckingham Palace.

The King, his wife, Camilla, his eldest son, Prince William, and daughter-in-law Catherine, are all wearing black in the photo as they were still in the official period of mourning following the Queen’s death on September 8, but still looked relaxed.

The photograph was taken on the Ministers Stairs at Buckingham Palace, in front of portraits of past monarchs. A palace source told the Mail On Sunday newspaper that the picture had been taken to record the “historic moment” privately for the family.

Two weeks ago, a photo of the King working with his famous red box was released for the first time.

The reigning monarch receives one of the iconic containers every day apart from Christmas Day, with the boxes containing government documents and Commonwealth papers.

The images of Charles at work was released on September 24, but had been taken on the September 11, just days after the Queen’s death.

Charles is seen in the image sitting at a gilded desk, reaching toward papers including one tied with a ribbon, while in the background sits a framed black and white photo of his parents.

 

King Charles
King Charles carries out official government duties from his red box in the Eighteenth Century Room at Buckingham Palace in this picture issued Sept. 23, 2022. Photo: Victoria Jones/PA Wire/Pool/Reuters

 

British leather firm Barrow Hepburn and Gale had previously confirmed boxes for Charles were in production, with a spokesman for the company saying the King would initially receive more than six boxes which would all carry the new royal cypher.

Every box has its own coded lock and it is thought they are red as the shade was a favourite of Prince Albert, consort to Queen Victoria.

Others believe the reason stretches back to the late 16th century, when Queen Elizabeth I’s representative Francis Throckmorton presented the Spanish ambassador Bernardino de Mendoza with a red briefcase filled with black puddings.

When the Queen reached her record 70 years on the throne earlier this year, Buckingham Palace released a similar image of her sitting with her red box, taken in the saloon of Sandringham House.

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