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Life & Style

Artisans in Britain, Germany and France craft the Royal Opera House’s new curtains

  • The shiny gold insignia will adorn a new pair of ‌stage curtains that will open and close performances at London’s Royal Opera House
Published April 22, 2026 Updated April 22, 2026 12:53pm
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

LONDON/VOLGELSHEIM: In a studio inside London’s Hampton Court Palace, hand embroiderer Marg Dier carefully stitches fabric foliage around King Charles ​III’s cypher.

The shiny gold insignia will adorn a new pair of ‌stage curtains that will open and close performances at London’s Royal Opera House.

Her stitches are small and must be very secure.

“It’s going to be going up and down at the Opera House,” said ​Dier, a senior studio embroiderer at the Royal School of Needlework Embroidery ​Studio, whose clients include royalty and fashion houses.

The Royal Ballet and Opera ⁠commissioned a new set of stage curtains to replace those bearing the cypher of ​Charles’ late mother, Queen Elizabeth, which have hung at the central London venue for ​27 years, introducing more than 10,000 performances.

The new ones are once again a collaboration between the Royal School of Needlework, whose team is stitching the corner decor depicting the cypher - the initials ‘C’ and ‘R’, ​Charles’ regnal number in Roman numerals plus the Tudor crown - and German stage equipment ​specialist Gerriets, which is making the deep red curtains.

Part is digital machine embroidery, but there is ‌hand ⁠embellishment, particularly on the crown, including colourful jewels, an ermine and a ruched red velvet cap.

Once finished, the embroidery travels to Gerriets’ sewing workshop in Volgelsheim on the French-German border. There, seamstresses apply the cypher onto the corners of the curtains, made of ​mohair velour. They come ​in two parts, ⁠each measuring 9.75 metres (32 feet) wide with a 10.8-metre drop.

“The curtain model is a swag opening curtain style,” said Andreas Fraemke, senior ​project manager at Gerriets. “It’s made of four layers… (with) three lining ​layers. This ⁠is to protect the curtain from the back and also for sound protection between audience and stage.”

The curtains will be unveiled at the May 14 Spring Gala.

“It’s a famous curtain, ⁠a famous ​opera house and so we are really proud… ​to do something like this,” Fraemke said, calling it a truly European project.


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