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Royal Christmas cards have a touchy-feely look this year

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48 minutes ago

Sean CoughlanRoyal correspondent

Kensington Palace Prince and Princess of Wales and their children in a Christmas card for 2025Kensington Palace

Maybe there was a memo sent round the royal households of Europe, but many of this year’s Christmas cards seem to have similar images of showing their families holding on to each other tenderly.

Touching, linking arms, holding hands, hugging, they’re all sending messages about how close they are to each other.

It’s like royal superglue has been applied, connecting them in these Christmas portraits. This is the era of the relatable royals.

The Prince and Princess of Wales have been leading the way, with a Christmas card showing a relaxed, informal family group cosying up to each other in the Norfolk countryside.

As with last year’s card, they’re continuing in a style that is far away from a stiff, formal portrait, showing a young family having fun together on a spring day, full of affection, dressed in jeans and jumpers.

Prince William has talked about making changes in his approach to the monarchy.

And this is projecting an image that they’re like any other family, with eye-lines not looking down on the viewer, literally down to earth, sitting on the grass.

PA Media The royal family's 1969 card features a black-and-white photograph of them gathered around a speed boat on land. All are smartly and formally dressed and smiling. The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Edward are standing. Prince Charles, Princess Anne and Prince Andrew are sitting.
PA Media

Compare that to this 1969 Christmas card, which shows the royals laughing, smiling and gathered around a boat. Presumably this was meant to feel relaxed and modern.

But they’re fairly stiffly dressed, they’re all standing apart and it looks like they’ve just been presented a prize on a game show.

Reuters King Charles and Queen Camilla in a garden in Rome in a picture for their Christmas cardReuters

Back to 2025 and King Charles and Queen Camilla are arm in arm in their Christmas card – a show of unity in what’s been a busy year.

The picture is a mix of the friendly and the formal, taken on the first day of the state visit to Italy, when the couple were celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary.

The Queen is wearing a lily of the valley brooch, a symbol of enduring love.

That trip was in April, which accounts for the spring backdrop for this Christmas card. The setting is Villa Wolkonsky in Rome, the elegant residence of the UK’s ambassador to Italy.

Archewell Harry and Meghan in the snow in their Christsmas card for 2025Archewell

Prince Harry and Meghan are holding hands in their Christmas card – or in fact, a “Happy Holiday Season” card.

Unlike others they’ve got the season right, with some festive snow captured in a picture from the Invictus Game in Canada in February.

They look like a fashionable couple, smiling optimistically from behind their sunglasses. It’s got a sense of movement.

Although the framing of the message isn’t so intimate: “On behalf of the Office of Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex.”

Belgian Royal Palace Belgian royal family posing for a Christmas cardBelgian Royal Palace

This portrait of the Belgian royal family shows them as though on the way to some grand event. Or at least waiting at a very upmarket bus stop.

They’ve gone for a more polished look – suits, ties, long dresses – but also with a bit of greenery. The picture was presumably taken when it was warmer, outside their residence at the Palace of Laeken.

It’s a multilingual country and the greeting inside – Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year – is in French, German, Flemish and English.

Spanish Royal Household The Spanish Royal Family's Christmas cardSpanish Royal Household

The Spanish royals have combined a range of styles with their Christmas card.

It’s projecting a casual, approachable, family image, as if catching them accidentally on a walk in the countryside. No more ties or tiaras for these modern royals.

But at the same time, it has all the dynastic shape of a traditional court painting. A monarch and his family are looking out at us. It’s Velasquez in jeans.

The setting, a place which won an award for the best village in the Asturias region, sends a message about supporting Spain’s small communities and their traditional heritage.

King Felipe is 6ft 6in (1.97m) tall, so presumably the family group had to be arranged so that he didn’t tower over them. For Spaniards, it’s a case of very long to reign over us.

Vanessa Von Zitzewitz/ Palais Princier Monaco royal Christmas card with family in formal clothes by a log fireVanessa Von Zitzewitz/ Palais Princier

Monaco’s royal Christmas card is much grander, with a big fire, oil painting, formal clothes, and a sense of regal order.

There’s also a sighting of the Alan Partridge-style smart casual look.

Bonus points though for actually showing a bit of Christmas, with a tree and the log fire, unlike many of the other cards which are basically just people sending out pictures of themselves.

Another extra detail is the tiny dog smuggled into the picture, beside Charlene, Princess of Monaco. She’s a former Olympic swimmer and so not shy about making a splash.

Maison Du Grand-Duc/ Kary Barthelmey The Luxembourg royal family beside a Christmas tree in their Christmas cardMaison Du Grand-Duc/ Kary Barthelmey

The Luxembourg royals, the Grand Duke Guillaume and the Grand Duchess Stephanie, have covered all the angles for a 2025 card.

It’s got the touchy-feely, we’re-not-uptight family atmosphere, full of playful laughs and children clambering over their parents.

It’s also got a proper tree with decorations, there’s a Rudolf reindeer toy and they’ve put some thought into all the splashes of red.

It might look a bit chaotic – but it’s Christmassy.

Reuters Christmas card from Juan Carlos featuring a row of five dogs in front a Christmas treeReuters

But there was no contest for this year’s winner. Juan Carlos, who abdicated as Spanish king in 2014, hit by scandals, now living in Abu Dhabi, sent an irresistible royal Christmas card.

Five small dogs in front of an artificial tree, looking regal in a kind of classic royal portrait line up. But it’s more bark than Bach.

What does it mean? The light is glinting on the dogs’ baubles. They look up with crumpled, hopeful faces. It’s Christmas and that’s a time for paws for thought.

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LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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