Burberry and Royal Collection Trust Honor Queen Elizabeth II's 100th Birthday
Burberry's four-piece centenary capsule for Queen Elizabeth II pairs a Yorkshire-made car coat with a gold corgi brooch wearing the Burberry Knight on a freshwater pearl.

Burberry launched a four-piece capsule with the Royal Collection Trust on March 12 to mark what would have been Queen Elizabeth II's 100th birthday, translating the late monarch's countryside wardrobe into a small group of garments and accessories rooted in her off-duty style.
The collection centers on a belted car coat crafted from lightweight cotton gabardine in Castleford, Yorkshire, lined in a holly green reinterpretation of the Burberry House Check. Hello! Magazine described the coat as "timeless racing green" with an organic silk lining. The check itself is an exclusive variant created for the capsule, its palette drawn from the Old Stewart Tartan, a pattern Queen Elizabeth wore regularly. That same holly green check appears on a Scottish-woven cashmere scarf and frames the border of a silk twill scarf printed with a hand-painted illustration of Balmoral Castle, the Royal Family's Highland home.
The fourth piece is the one most likely to stop people mid-scroll: a gold-plated brooch shaped like a corgi, the late Queen's favorite breed, dressed in an enamelled check coat and carrying the Burberry Knight motif on a freshwater pearl. It is a small, precise object that manages to compress an entire relationship between a monarch and a fashion house into something you can pin to a lapel.
That relationship has history behind it. Burberry was awarded a Royal Warrant in 1955, and Queen Elizabeth wore the brand throughout her reign, particularly for outdoor pursuits. Hello! Magazine noted she regularly reached for Burberry headscarves while walking her dogs and horse riding, an association the capsule makes explicit in its material choices: outerwear made in Yorkshire, cashmere woven in Scotland, a print sourced from a tartan she actually wore.

Independent fashion coverage including FashionNetwork and WWD described the edit as "small and symbolic," which is accurate. Four pieces is a deliberate restraint, not a product strategy, and the capsule reads as a considered tribute rather than a commercial expansion.
The collection's timing aligns with a broader centenary program. The exhibition "Queen Elizabeth II: Her Life in Style" opens at The King's Gallery, Buckingham Palace on April 10 and runs through October 18. The exhibition includes three Burberry pieces from the Queen's archive: a hooded riding cape from around 2010, an original invoice for a Burberry coat ordered in 1966, and a Burberry Check silk scarf from 2013. The show is accompanied by the official centenary publication "Queen Elizabeth II: Fashion and Style."
The capsule is available now at Burberry.com and at selected Burberry stores worldwide, as well as through Royal Collection Trust shops in Edinburgh, London, and Windsor and online at RoyalCollectionShop.co.uk. Pricing has not been disclosed.
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