But her style also changed over the course of the decade. The Princess’ divorce from Charles – which took place in 1996 and which will no doubt form a central storyline in this upcoming season – marked a turning point for Diana’s aesthetic. With the help of stylist and friend Anna Harvey, she stripped back her wardrobe and replaced the pastel jumpers and puffy sleeves with beautiful blazers, straight-leg jeans and loafers, and even a new cropped haircut.
From that point on, everything emphasised her shape. Freed from strict royal household rules around how much skin could be shown, she looked entirely A-list in everything from her headline-grabbing silk negligee dress (John Galliano’s first-ever design for Dior, which was described as “the greatest publicity coup in fashion history”) to her post-gym uniform of cycling shorts, sweatshirts and trainers – a combination still copied by influencers like Hailey Bieber today.
“She started to embrace a more American aesthetic at this point,” says Eloise Moran, the author of The Lady Di Look Book. “New York fashion was pushing the minimalist trend and there were rumours Diana might move to Manhattan – she loved America and America loved her, and I think that’s why in the last years of her life she often wore styles that originated over there.”

After years of having to manage Charles’ ego, Diana was also finally ready to be taken seriously in her own right, and this was reflected in her post-divorce wardrobe.
“I love all her 90s office wear,” says Moran. “The minimalist nature of it shows that she wanted to be this working princess. She looked incredible in those sleek minis which she wore with blazers with nothing underneath. It could have been conservative but it wasn’t at all – instead she looked like a hot Ally Mcbeal.”
Diana was arguably never more alluring than in her final summer, as she sailed the Mediterranean with Dodi Fayed, photographers trailing in her wake. Her simple navy shorts and sleek dresses epitomised the simplicity of her later style, while her animal print and rainbow one-pieces by Israeli designer Gottex, which she wore with matching sarongs, showed her innate star power.‘I never wanted to be Mr. Harrods’: Meet Mohamed Al-Fayed’s son, Omar Fayed
“She looked amazing and glowed with life that summer,” says Moran. “She completely captured the French Riviera look, but made it even more glamorous. Yes she colluded with the paparazzi but she knew what she was doing – and you got the feeling she was enjoying finally being in control of her life.”

Interestingly, the costume design team for The Crown have spoken about how many of Diana’s relaxed 90s looks – her athleisure, her straight-leg jeans and one-piece swimming costumes – have found their way back into current fashion some 30 years later. “So many of the young group working on the film just loved the clothes,” said chief costume designer Amy Roberts in an interview. “Partly because they were all pieces they wanted to wear now.”
Moran agrees, adding that as Diana grew in confidence, her fashion choices became more about who she was and what she wanted to express than about following trends. “In the 80s she was experimental but in the late 90s you really start seeing her embodying a style of her own,” she adds.
“I only wish we could have seen what she had done as she grew older – as it no doubt would have been wonderful.”
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