Duchess Meghan Shares a Late-Spring Photo Dump
And it turns out little Lilibet is a Beyoncé fan

Reported by Harper's Bazaar.
Meghan Markle has had a genuinely relentless spring — new As Ever product drops, a women's retreat appearance, an Australian tour with Prince Harry, a MasterChef cameo, active film projects, and two kids to raise. So when she surfaces with a casual photo dump, it lands differently. This isn't a PR rollout. It reads like someone actually exhaling.
The fashion is quiet in the best way. According to Harper's Bazaar, the carousel opens with Meghan flat on the grass, face shielded by a Sarah Bray Bermuda sun hat, dressed in a Matteau striped button-down and a Posse white linen skirt — effortless, expensive-looking without trying. A basket of flowers and a few As Ever products sit beside her like a still life. Then there's the double denim moment: a coordinated set from Tracy James's eponymous label, worn in a selfie that confirms the Duchess has fully committed to the denim-on-denim renaissance the rest of us are still debating.
The Quiet Stuff
Between the outfit shots: garden produce, baby birds, a sleeping dog, a cooking video. These are the kinds of images that feel genuinely unscripted — not because celebrity photo dumps are ever truly candid, but because the curation here isn't straining for anything. The glimpses of her children follow the same logic. Archie appears outside kicking around a giant inflatable soccer ball with Harry. Lilibet's face is cropped, but her wavy red hair is unmistakable — and she's wearing a graphic tee that reads "B is for Beyoncé," which is either the most on-brand thing a Sussex child could possibly wear or proof that Queen Bey's cultural grip is genuinely generational. (For context: Beyoncé is a friend of Meghan's.)
The dump closes on a black-and-white shot of Meghan and Harry watching a sunset together, which she captioned: "Springing into summer 🌼." No manifesto. No announcement. Just a woman showing you her actual life — the linen, the kids, the dog, the denim — and somehow making it feel like enough.
When the clothes are good and the life looks real, you don't need to say much else.
Read the original at Harper's Bazaar.


