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There were endless fittings with the incredible shrinking bride
-- Diana lost so much weight in the weeks before the ceremony that the designers had to make several successively smaller bodices. She had a 23-inch waist by her wedding day. Emanuel, 57, said as the wedding date neared she started to worry that the gown's 25-foot (7.6-meter) train would separate from the rest of the dress as Diana entered St. Paul's Cathedral. She feared she would be remembered as the woman who designed the dress that fell apart. Emanuel used safety pins, hooks and stitches to secure the train and make sure calamity didn't strike. "We made a parasol in case it rained," she said. "Actually two: one ivory, one white, so the umbrella maker wouldn't know the color of the dress." Sounds a bit paranoid? Not really. She remembers reporters constantly begging her for information, making up sob stories about how they would be fired if they didn't find out details about the dress. That was in the quaint, pre-Internet era. Today, Emanuel said, the pressure is even more intense and the need for secrecy even higher because anyone with a camera phone could flummox the palace's best laid plans if they get a shot of Middleton entering a design salon for a gown fitting. Regardless of the designer, Emanuel believes the fittings are taking place at one of the royal palaces in a secure environment, because the design studios are likely staked out by the ultra-competitive British press. But why hasn't the name leaked out? Why hasn't the designer boasted to his or her partner, who told the dentist or the school teacher, with the whispered warning not to pass it on, starting a chain reaction that ends with the designer's identity on the front page of tabloids? Emanuel said it hasn't happened because it's in everyone's interest to maintain secrecy so that Middleton can surprise fiance Prince William
-- and the world -- on their wedding day. Keeping the design out of the news is an important part of the royal wedding gown commission, she said. "It's got to be a surprise, that's the whole thing," Emanuel said. "Bit by bit, all the details of the wedding are being released, and that's the last thing, and everyone wants to know." She had faith that the designer -- expected to be British -- will engineer a showstopper. "I'm sure it will be a fantastic surprise when she gets out of the car; that's what everyone's waiting for," she said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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