File:Queen Mary Wellcome L0069844 (cropped).jpg|Queen Mary wearing the Delhi Durbar Tiara (since redesigned) File:Queen Elizabeth II official portrait for 1959 tour (retouched) (cropped) (3-to-4 aspect ratio).jpg|Elizabeth II in 1959 wearing the Vladimir tiara and the Queen Victoria Jubilee Necklace File:President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump's Visit to the United Kingdom (48007831608) (cropped) (cropped).jpg|Elizabeth II wearing the Burmese Ruby Tiara at a state banquet in 2019 File:President Ford and Queen Elizabeth dance - NARA - 6923701.jpg|Elizabeth II wearing the Kokoshnik Tiara while dancing with President Ford at the White House in 1976 File:StateLibQld 1 180359 Queen Elizabeth II and the Lord Mayor of Brisbane at the Royal Ball, Brisbane, 1954.jpg|Elizabeth II wearing the Lover's Knot Tiara at the Royal Ball, Brisbane in 1954 File:President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump's Visit to the United Kingdom (48007906747) (cropped).jpg|The Duchess of Cornwall (later
Queen Camilla) wearing the Greville Tiara at a state banquet in 2019 File:The Duchess of York, 1925.jpg|The Duchess of York (later
Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother) wearing the Lotus Flower Tiara in 1925 File:The Canadian nurse (1939) (14771468775).jpg|The Duchess of York (later Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother) wearing the Strathmore Rose Tiara in 1927
Delhi Durbar Tiara The Delhi Durbar Tiara was made by
Garrard & Co. for Queen
Mary, the wife of King
George V, to wear at the
Delhi Durbar in 1911. As the Crown Jewels never leave the country, George V had the
Imperial Crown of India made to wear at the Durbar, and Queen Mary wore the tiara. It was part of a set of jewellery made for Queen Mary to use at the event which included a necklace,
stomacher, brooch and earrings. Made of gold and platinum, the tiara is 8 cm (3 in) tall and has the form of a tall circlet of
lyres and S-scrolls linked by festoons of diamonds. It was originally set with 10 of the Cambridge emeralds, acquired by Queen Mary in 1910 and first owned by her grandmother, the
Duchess of Cambridge. In 1912, the tiara was altered to take one or both of the
Cullinan III and IV diamonds; the pear-shaped diamond was held at the top, and the cushion-shaped stone hung in the oval aperture underneath. It is not, as has sometimes been claimed, made with diamonds that once belonged to George III, but reuses diamonds taken from a necklace/tiara purchased by Queen Victoria from Collingwood & Co. as a wedding present for Princess Mary in 1893. In August 1936, Mary gave the tiara to her daughter-in-law Queen
Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother). When Queen Elizabeth, consort of King
George VI, first wore the tiara, Sir
Henry Channon called it "an ugly spiked tiara". Later, she lent the piece to her daughter, Princess Elizabeth (future Elizabeth II), as "
something borrowed" for
her wedding to
Prince Philip in 1947. It was exhibited with a number of other royal tiaras in 2001.
Queen Adelaide's Fringe Necklace The Queen Adelaide's Fringe Necklace is a circlet incorporating brilliant diamonds that were formerly owned by George III. Originally commissioned in 1830 and made by
Rundell, Bridge & Co, the necklace has been worn by many
queens consort. Originally, it could be worn as a collar or necklace. Queen Victoria modified it so it could be mounted on a wire to form the tiara. It was classified as an "heirloom of the Crown" in
Garrard's 1858 inventory of Queen Victoria's jewels. The grand duchess, known after her marriage as Princess Nicholas of Greece, inherited it from her mother,
Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna, who received it as a wedding gift from her husband in 1874. It originally had 15 large drop pearls, and was made by the jeweller Carl Edvard
Bolin at a cost of 48,200 rubles. During the
Russian Revolution in 1917, the tiara was hidden with other jewels somewhere in
Vladimir Palace in
Petrograd, and later saved from Soviet Russia by
Albert Stopford, a British art dealer and secret agent. In the years to follow, Princess Nicholas sold pieces of jewellery from her collection to support her exiled family and various charities. Queen Mary had the tiara altered to accommodate 15 of the Cambridge
cabochon emeralds. The original drop pearls can easily be replaced as an alternative to the emeralds. Elizabeth II inherited the tiara directly from her grandmother in 1953. It is almost exclusively worn together with the Cambridge and Delhi Durbar
parures, also containing large emeralds. Elizabeth wore the tiara in her official portrait as
Queen of Canada as none of the
Commonwealth realms besides the United Kingdom have their own crown jewels. Made by E. Wolfe & Co., it was purchased from
Garrard & Co. by a committee organised by
Lady Eva Greville. In 1914, Mary adapted the tiara to take 13 diamonds in place of the large oriental pearls surmounting the tiara. Leslie Field, author of ''The Queen's Jewels'', described it as, "a festoon-and-scroll with nine large oriental pearls on diamond spikes and set on a base of alternate round and lozenge collets between two plain bands of diamonds". At first, Elizabeth wore the tiara without its base and pearls but the base was reattached in 1969. The Girls of Great Britain and Ireland Tiara is one of Elizabeth's most recognisable pieces of jewellery due to its widespread appearance in portraits of the monarch on British banknotes and coinage. Elizabeth II's daughter-in-law Queen Camilla wore this tiara for the first time when she visited
Mansion House in 2023.
Burmese Ruby Tiara Elizabeth ordered the Burmese Ruby Tiara in 1973, and it was made by Garrard & Co. It is designed in the form of a wreath of roses, with silver and diamonds making the petals, and clusters of gold and rubies forming the centre of the flowers. A total of 96 rubies are mounted on the tiara; they were originally part of a necklace given to her in 1947 as a wedding present by the people of
Burma (now
Myanmar), who credited them with having the ability to protect their owner from sickness and evil. The diamonds were taken from a floral tiara made by
Cartier in 1935 and chosen by Elizabeth herself as her wedding present from the wealthy
Nizam of Hyderabad. While this floral tiara was dismantled, rose brooches were preserved. This tiara was later worn by Queen Camilla in 2023.
Queen Alexandra's Kokoshnik Tiara The Kokoshnik Tiara was presented to
Alexandra, Princess of Wales, as a 25th wedding anniversary gift in 1888 by
Lady Salisbury on behalf of 365
peeresses of the United Kingdom. She had always wanted a tiara in the style of a
kokoshnik (Russian for "cock's comb"), a traditional Russian folk headdress, and knew the design well from a tiara belonging to her sister,
Maria Feodorovna, the Empress of Russia. It was made by Garrard & Co. and has vertical
white gold bars pavé-set with diamonds, the longest of which is 6.5 cm (2.5 in). In a letter to her aunt, the
Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz,
Princess Mary wrote, "The presents are quite magnificent [...] The ladies of society gave [Alexandra] a lovely diamond spiked tiara". Upon the death of Queen Alexandra, the tiara passed to her daughter-in-law Queen Mary, who bequeathed it to Elizabeth in 1953. The tiara is featured in a 1960 portrait of the Queen taken by Anthony Buckley, which was used as the banknote portrait of the Queen for several countries and territories. The tiara is also featured on a 1979 New Zealand coin effigy of the Queen designed by James Berry.
Queen Mary's Lover's Knot Tiara In 1913, Queen Mary asked Garrard & Co. to make a copy of a tiara owned by her grandmother,
Princess Augusta of Hesse-Kassel, using Queen Mary's own diamonds and pearls. French in its neo-classical design, the tiara has 19 oriental pearls suspended from
lover's knot bows each centered with a large brilliant. Originally, the tiara had 38 pearls; 19 on the upright side and 19 hanging from the arches. The 19 upright pearls were removed. Mary left the tiara to Elizabeth II, who later loaned it to
Diana, Princess of Wales, for her wedding, but she wore her family tiara instead. She wore it often, notably with her 'Elvis dress' on a visit to
Hong Kong in 1989, but on her divorce from
Prince Charles it was returned to Elizabeth.
Catherine, Princess of Wales has worn it to a number of state occasions since 2015.
Meander Tiara This tiara was a wedding present to Elizabeth from her mother-in-law,
Princess Andrew of Greece and Denmark. The Meander Tiara is in the classical
Greek key pattern, with a large diamond in the centre enclosed by a
laurel wreath of diamonds. It also incorporates a wreath of leaves and scrolls on either side. Elizabeth II never wore this item in public, and it was given in 1972 to her daughter, Princess Anne, who has frequently worn the tiara in public, notably during her engagement to Captain
Mark Phillips and for an official portrait marking her 50th birthday. Anne lent the tiara to her daughter,
Zara Philips, to use at her wedding to
Mike Tindall in 2011.
Cartier Halo Tiara This tiara, made by
Cartier in 1936, was purchased by the Duke of York (later King George VI) for his wife (later the Queen Mother) three weeks before they became king and queen. It has a rolling cascade of 16 scrolls that converge on two central scrolls topped by a diamond. Altogether, it contains 739 brilliants and 149 baton diamonds. The tiara was given to Elizabeth on her 18th birthday in 1944, and was borrowed by
Princess Margaret, who used it at the 1953
coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. Later, Elizabeth lent the Halo Tiara to Princess Anne, before giving her the Greek Meander Tiara in 1972. The Halo Tiara was lent to the then
Duchess of Cambridge to wear at her wedding to
Prince William in 2011.
Greville Honeycomb Tiara This tiara was left to Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) by Dame
Margaret Greville upon Greville's death in 1942. Made by
Boucheron in 1920, the tiara features a honeycomb-patterned diamond lattice and was a favorite of the Queen Mother. In 1953, the Queen Mother commissioned
Cartier to modify its height by rearranging the diamonds located on the upper row. Elizabeth II inherited the tiara from her mother in 2002 and subsequently placed it under long-term loan to the then
Duchess of Cornwall.
Queen Mary's Diamond Bandeau Tiara The tiara was made in 1932 for Queen
Mary. Its centre brooch had been a wedding gift from the
County of Lincoln in 1893. The tiara is a platinum band, made up of eleven sections, a detachable centre brooch with interlaced opals and diamonds. The tiara was lent to the
Duchess of Sussex to use at her wedding to
Prince Harry in 2018.
Lotus Flower Tiara This tiara was created by Garrard London in the 1920s. Made out of pearls and diamonds, it was made from a necklace originally given to Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) as a wedding gift. It was often worn by
Princess Margaret, upon whose death, the tiara was returned to Elizabeth II. The tiara has been worn at a number of state occasions by Elizabeth II's granddaughter-in-law the
Princess of Wales.
Strathmore Rose Tiara Given to the Queen Mother as a wedding gift by her father
Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, this floral piece was worn by the Queen Mother for a few years following her marriage. It was brought from Catchpole and Williams and the flowers can be detached and used as brooches. It became a part of Elizabeth II's collection since her mother's death in 2002. In 2025, Queen Camilla wore this tiara at the annual diplomatic reception.
Queen Mother's Cartier Bandeau Composed of ruby, emerald, and sapphire bracelets given to Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) by King George VI, the set was worn by the Queen Mother in the form of a bandeau. It is now a part of Elizabeth II's collection; she had worn the pieces individually as bracelets over the years and had also lent them to other members of the royal family. Originally a complete circlet set with diamonds and opals. Remodeled in 1858 to remove diamonds lost in the Hanoverian claim, leaving space open at the back of the tiara. Opals were replaced with rubies by Queen Alexandra in 1902. It is made up of 'Moghul arches and lotus flowers' in diamonds and rubies. The tiara was seen multiple times on the Queen Mother, but Elizabeth II only wore it once during the state visit to Malta in 2005. The tiara was later worn by Catherine, Princess of Wales during a state banquet in December 2025. It is made up of emerald-cut aquamarines and diamonds. ==Earrings==