In London, a Corgi Parade Offers a Heartfelt Tribute to the Queen photographed for Vogue.
The U.K. has been in mourning in the weeks following the death of Britain's longest-reigning monarch Queen Elizabeth II. These tributes have both adhered to the traditional parameters of royal mourning protocol, and extended far beyond the ordinary. For every mourner who lined up along the Royal Mile in Windsor or outside Buckingham Palace to lay a wreath or a bouquet of flowers, there was another who crafted a figurine of the Queen out of Lego, or made a miniature gallery of stamps featuring her profile, or even placed a marmalade sandwich somewhere in the Royal Parks as a nod to her affinity with Paddington Bear. Still, there could be no better homage to the Queen and her enduring legacy than a gesture that recognized her love of animals—and then, none more so than her beloved corgis.
On Sunday, October 9, corgi owners from across Britain convened on The Mall—the lengthy carriageway that leads from Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace—to walk their faithful friends along the route by which the Queen made her final journey to Windsor Castle last month. There, corgis dressed in the ultimate finery—handmade crowns, tweed bow ties, bejewelled collars—paid their final respects to Her Majesty, even if it seemed to be unwitting. Elsewhere, corgi motifs cropped up on hand-knitted jumpers and silk scarves, the latter of which served as a pillar of the Queen’s style.
The celebration, after all, was truly fit for Her Majesty. In the words of Agatha Crerar-Gilbert, a key organizer of the parade whose corgi (named Ruffus), took center stage during the proceedings: “Rest in peace—she’s gone to heaven to join all her corgis.”
See more here; https://www.vogue.com/article/london-corgi-parade-tribute-to-the-queen