The Princess of Wales, who announced earlier this month that she is in remission, was spotted shopping in London.
Specially recorded music from home and abroad.
The Princess of Wales, 43, was seen shopping at Finlay's store in the Notting Hill neighborhood of London in photos obtained by Deux Moi on Jan. 22. Princess Kate has long been a fan of the British eyewear brand, which sells both eyeglasses and sunglasses at its two hubs in London.
Millions of Britons receive emergency weather alert as warning issued for London - The alert caused mobile phones to make a loud-siren like sound and was sent to 4.5 million Britons
Catherine, Princess of Wales revealed on Tuesday that she is in remission from cancer, following a visit to the London hospital where she was treated last year.
Prince George is currently a student at Lambrook School, but speculation has begun over which school he will attend next.
Not even Princess Diana, who became Princess of Wales in 1981, gave companies her official seal of approval when she held the title
While Wales is conventionally - and deservedly - known for a surfeit of bands wielding guitars, its underbelly of deck-bothering, keyboard-twiddling dance and electronica has been quietly getting on with packing dancefloors.
CHANGE is coming for Prince George who will be starting a new school next year. Ahead of the big move from Lambrook School, Princess Kate looked round two prospective elite London schools in
William, who has been patron of youth homelessness charity Centrepoint for 20 years, joined youngsters at the charity’s centre in Ealing, west London, which provides 16 to 25-year-olds with a home, employment and education opportunities, as well as counselling.
The Prince of Wales will meet young people experiencing homelessness during a visit to a charity centre in London. During the trip on Tuesday, William will speak to some of those being supported by the charity, Centrepoint, and enjoy sports activities provided by the service, including boxing and table football.
More than four million people across Northern Ireland and Scotland received emergency alerts on their phones in the “largest real-life use of the tool to date”, as a damaging storm with winds of up to 100mph bears down on the UK.