Latest news with #DianaMuseum

Time of India
27-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Diana Museum Founder SCREAMS, JUMPS, CRIES; Whopping $500k Auction Bet Ends With Happy Tears
Princess Diana Museum founder Renae Plant stole the spotlight at a Los Angeles auction after securing Diana's iconic 'Caring Dress' for $520,000. Overcome with emotion, Plant jumped, danced, and fell to the floor as the room erupted in applause. The 1988 Bellville Sassoon floral dress, worn by Diana during hospital visits, became a highlight of the sale. Plant, who met Diana as a teen, called the moment priceless as she added the treasured piece to her massive collection. Read More

Sydney Morning Herald
27-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Sydney Morning Herald
Australian collector buys Princess Diana's ‘caring dress' for $520,000
An Australian collector of Princess Diana memorabilia has purchased the iconic 'caring dress' at auction for US$520,000 (approximately AU$794,000), 37 years after the purchaser met the princess wearing the dress. Renae Plant – who manages an archive of 2700 Diana pieces as well as the virtual Princess Diana Museum – fell to the floor crying after placing the final US$400,000 bid (plus US$120,000 in fees) for the Bellville Sassoon dress designed for then-prince Charles and Diana's 1988 tour of Australia to mark the bicentenary. The floral day dress was expected to sell for between US$200,000 and US$300,000 according to pre-auction documents. It received its nickname after Diana wore it repeatedly to visit hospitals across the world, including in Nigeria, Brazil and Spain, says designer David Sassoon. On the website for The Princess Diana Museum, Plant says she met the royal couple as a teenager during their 1983 and 1988 tours, and shook hands with the princess while she was wearing the dress at St Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney. 'When Diana saw me she reached up over the crowd and shook my hand!! As you can imagine, that was a dream come true, and definitely the beginning of a long journey … a lifelong passion for the Princess,' Plant wrote. 'Over the years, people have asked why Diana is so important to me. Here's why: Diana stood for change … She was the first royal to remove her gloves and shake the public's hands. That was huge. She brought much-needed attention and sympathy to the AIDS crisis, helping to diminish the fear and stigma associated with the disease … I can think of no one who has the same positive effect on the world that Diana did during the short time she was alive.' Plant also operates the Princess and the Platypus Foundation – named after a ceramic platypus she says Diana dropped in 1983, which Plant still has today – a charity that raises money to acquire and maintain pieces for the museum, and donate to charities in Diana's honour. Earlier in June, the museum's Instagram page posted a fundraising callout to raise money for the dress.

The Age
27-06-2025
- Entertainment
- The Age
Australian collector buys Princess Diana's ‘caring dress' for $520,000
An Australian collector of Princess Diana memorabilia has purchased the iconic 'caring dress' at auction for US$520,000 (approximately AU$794,000), 37 years after the purchaser met the princess wearing the dress. Renae Plant – who manages an archive of 2700 Diana pieces as well as the virtual Princess Diana Museum – fell to the floor crying after placing the final US$400,000 bid (plus US$120,000 in fees) for the Bellville Sassoon dress designed for then-prince Charles and Diana's 1988 tour of Australia to mark the bicentenary. The floral day dress was expected to sell for between US$200,000 and US$300,000 according to pre-auction documents. It received its nickname after Diana wore it repeatedly to visit hospitals across the world, including in Nigeria, Brazil and Spain, says designer David Sassoon. On the website for The Princess Diana Museum, Plant says she met the royal couple as a teenager during their 1983 and 1988 tours, and shook hands with the princess while she was wearing the dress at St Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney. 'When Diana saw me she reached up over the crowd and shook my hand!! As you can imagine, that was a dream come true, and definitely the beginning of a long journey … a lifelong passion for the Princess,' Plant wrote. 'Over the years, people have asked why Diana is so important to me. Here's why: Diana stood for change … She was the first royal to remove her gloves and shake the public's hands. That was huge. She brought much-needed attention and sympathy to the AIDS crisis, helping to diminish the fear and stigma associated with the disease … I can think of no one who has the same positive effect on the world that Diana did during the short time she was alive.' Plant also operates the Princess and the Platypus Foundation – named after a ceramic platypus she says Diana dropped in 1983, which Plant still has today – a charity that raises money to acquire and maintain pieces for the museum, and donate to charities in Diana's honour. Earlier in June, the museum's Instagram page posted a fundraising callout to raise money for the dress.