Not only Jerez de la Frontera has dressed in white to celebrate the wedding of Victoria de Honhelohe and Maxime Corneille, but also Valencia, the setting chosen by the Prince Louis Nicholas Crépy of Orleans to say ‘I do’ with Carolina Torio Ballester.
The marriage union has brought together well-known royal faces such as the groom’s grandmother, Beatriz de Orleans, who attended with his daughter; Prince Carl Philip of Orleans accompanied by his wife, Naomi-Valeska Kern; Pedro de Borbón with his wife Sofía Landaluce and also well-known faces such as the opera singer Ainhoa Arteta, dressed in camel-colored taffeta, with a shirt body and A-shaped skirt to the feet.
For her part, Beatriz, cousin of King Juan Carlos, attended to the media at the door of the temple, accompanied by one of her daughters dressed in a total look in fuchsia with a hat. Beatriz confessed to us that she was happy for her grandson’s wedding and assured us that the groom was feeling well, within the usual nervousness that a person who is going to get married feels: “Everyone on our wedding day was super nervous.”
The grandmother of Prince Louis Nicolás Crépy of Orleans clarified doubts about the presence of the Spanish Royal Family. “We are all here,” he said, adding that “it is a day of happiness.” Despite repeating the question about the possible assistance of Casa Real, Beatriz shook her head and said: “You’re going to see.” The truth is that both Felipe and Letizia and the emeritus Kings were invited. Let us remember that the members of the Orleans dynasty are like the Bourbons, descendants of Louis Philippe I, the last king of France.
Personalities of nobility and royalty and well-known faces
Prince Louis Nicolas Crépy of Orleans, the eldest of the eleven grandchildren of Princess Beatrice of Orleans, and his fiancée, the Valencian Carolina Torio Ballester, met this Saturday, October 14, at the Valencia Cathedral with prominent guests from high society . The groom is the first of the five children of the marriage formed by Clotilde of Orleans and the French economist Edouard Crepy.
For the special celebration, Beatriz de Orleans, grandmother of the groom, opted for a tunic-style dress with ankle length, powder pink, long sleeves and rhinestones surrounding the V-neck.
Prince Carl Philip of Orleans arrived accompanied by his wife, Naomi-Valeska Kern, the German and widow of the couturier Otto Kern whom he married just a few days ago. The German opted to wear a pastel blue two-piece consisting of a pleated midi skirt and a jacket with buttons and a belt, all combined with a tilted ecru headdress.
The mother of the bride, Maite Ballester Fornés, She opted for this look signed by the Asturian Marcos Luengo, the same one who designed her daughter’s dress. Maite Ballester She has a degree in Finance and Political Science from Boston College and an MBA from Columbia University in New York and a founding partner at Nexxus Iberia, as well as an independent director of Prisa, Cellnex, former director of Repsol and the Lar real estate group.
Another of the guests related to the King’s family is Pedro de Borbón. The son of the infant Charles of Bourbon and Princess Anne of Orleans arrived with his wife Sofia Landaluce, who chose this eggplant-colored dress, with short sleeves and a skirt below the knee, cinched at the waist with a pink bow and combined them with this tilted headdress adorned with large flowers. Pedro, Duke of Calabria, is president of the Royal Council of the Military Orders in Spain, exercises the grand mastership of the Constantinian Order of Saint George and is head of the Royal House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies.
Cristina de Borbón Dos Sicilias, sister of the Duke of Calabria, surrendered to fuchsia, as did Clotilde, the daughter of Beatrice of Orleans. She wore a long-sleeved dress with a crew neck, with a skirt below the knee and a gathered detail on one side of the waist.