Princess Kate's most "money" looks went viral on TikTok in a series of jewelry-laden clips from her royal engagements.
Fans praised the future queen for a series of clips in which they felt she looked expensive cut to the song "Dirty Cash (Money Talks)," a U.K. dance track from the 1990s which has had a recent renaissance.
The clip went viral after it was liked 50,000 times and viewed almost 200,000, times having been posted with the message: "The money is talkinggg LAWD."
The montage begins with a clip of Kate's visit to baby bank Sebby's Corner, in Barnet, North London, on November 24, 2023, when she wore a black roll neck sweater.
Another clip showed Kate watching Wimbledon in a polka dot Alessandra Rich gown paired with diamond and sapphire earrings and matching pendant necklace. She also wore her sapphire and diamond engagement ring, originally Princess Diana's.
And a third showed her in a white sweater which she wore on a visit to Landau Forte College Derby in the English Midlands, in February 2023.
Other clips in the montage included the Roland Mouret green dress she wore to Wimbledon in 2023 and close-up of Diana's emerald and diamond choker, which Kate wore to The Earthshot Prize Awards, in Boston in December 2022.
One fan replied, "I want to be like her (goals)," while another added, "I'm screaming shouting crying" and a third said: "Future Queen."
Kate's year has been dominated by her chemotherapy treatment which she said in March was preventive and came after doctors discovered "cancer had been present" in her body prior to her having abdominal surgery in January.
The princess was back out in public over the weekend, however, when she attended the Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday and watched Britain's national Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph in London on Sunday.
Kate is next likely to be seen in public in December when she is expected to host her annual carol service Together at Christmas at Westminster Abbey in London.
In September, she announced that her chemotherapy treatment had come to an end more than six months after it began in late February.
However, she has not yet gone back to work full-time, saying she was focusing on staying "cancer free."
Jack Royston is Newsweek's chief royal correspondent based in London. You can find him on X (formerly Twitter) at @jack_royston and read his stories on Newsweek's The Royals Facebook page.
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