Princess Ingrid Alexandre has a busy official schedule. Recently back from Sydney, where she is studying, she joined her father, Prince Haakon, on a scientific brisling expedition in the Oslo Fjord. The next day, she met privately with filmmaker Jannicke Mikkelsen, known as Norway’s first female astronaut. Today she continues her engagements, first appearing at the Save the Children Peace Prize ceremony and later attending the Nobel Peace Prize award presentation at Oslo City Hall, where the prize is being given to Venezuelan former lawmaker María Corina Machado.
She started Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. alongside her mother, Princess Mette-Marit. For the occasion, Ingrid chose the season’s standout royal color, burgundy. The shade suggests calm, steady leadership and conveys elegance and maturity. It feels formal without losing warmth, sitting between red and brown while avoiding the boldness of the first and the coolness of the second.
For her first event, Ingrid wore a burgundy wrap coat, a royal favorite seen on figures like Queen Letizia and Queen Máxima of the Netherlands. She styled it as a dress and paired it with knee-high boots, another staple for royals at this time of year. Later, before the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, she made a quick change, switching to nude pumps and a deep red coat dress, a new piece from Lauren Ralph Lauren. For the main ceremony, she wore a navy ensemble with a peplum jacket by Scanlan Theodore and a matching midi skirt. She also partially pinned back her hair with a discreet bow-style headpiece, similar to the style often worn by Kate Middleton and Princess Charlotte.
Mette-Marit also changed outfits during the day. She debuted a Pia Tjelta dress with a box neckline, long sleeves, and a midi skirt. Made from black viscose with small white rose prints, it was the Ava model. Earlier, she had worn a white wrap coat, camel leather gloves, and a Borsalino hat. For the Nobel ceremony, she chose an all-white look.
