For crown and country...
The coronation scene was inspired by a cartoon of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, drawn by Frank Robbins in his Johnny Hazard comic strip. He must have been working from a photograph. There were many more figures in the crowd in the original.
The coronation scene was inspired by a cartoon of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, drawn by Frank Robbins in his Johnny Hazard comic strip. He must have been working from a photograph. There were many more figures in the crowd in the original.
Category Story / Comics
Species Hyena
Size 800 x 999px
File Size 302.5 kB
Whoosh, um...sports teams have their "colors" that identify them at a distance on the field. When they play at home, they wear uniforms with the dominant color (the darker one) accented by the other color (the lighter one.) When they play in another team's field, the colors are reversed. Sometimes they wear a white uniform shirt with accents of their colors, instead of the dark uniform shirt they wear at home. That way fans can tell which is the home team and which is the visiting team.
Like this, from the NY Jets football team: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipe.....uniforms19.png
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Jets
Like this, from the NY Jets football team: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipe.....uniforms19.png
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Jets
It was an example of when a group has two different-colored uniforms.
There are numerous different uniforms in most militaries. Almost a bewildering number, and the uniform that's supposed to be worn changes by day, duty, and sometimes, even by the hour. The British armed forces historically had so many different variations of their regimental uniforms, that I wonder how anybody could have kept track of what they were supposed to be wearing at any given time. Things like barracks uniforms, undress, dress, duty, mess, parade...
That the Heir's staff wears the "light" version of the Duchess's livery is a simplification.
The other four Princesses are wearing their mother's colors because they are there representing them.
There are numerous different uniforms in most militaries. Almost a bewildering number, and the uniform that's supposed to be worn changes by day, duty, and sometimes, even by the hour. The British armed forces historically had so many different variations of their regimental uniforms, that I wonder how anybody could have kept track of what they were supposed to be wearing at any given time. Things like barracks uniforms, undress, dress, duty, mess, parade...
That the Heir's staff wears the "light" version of the Duchess's livery is a simplification.
The other four Princesses are wearing their mother's colors because they are there representing them.
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