
Nearly eight decades after the world watched a young Princess Elizabeth say “I do,” previously unseen color footage of the royal wedding of the century has finally been made public, and it is nothing short of breathtaking.
On November 20, 1947, 21-year-old Princess Elizabeth married Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten in a glittering ceremony at Westminster Abbey. While black-and-white newsreels have long been familiar to history lovers, these newly restored and colorized (or originally shot-in-color) reels, released in November 2025 by the British Pathé archive in collaboration with the Royal Collection Trust, offer an astonishingly vivid window into the day Britain fell in love all over again.
The clips capture moments never widely seen before: the radiant smile of the future Queen as she steps out of the Glass Coach in her legendary Norman Hartnell gown embroidered with 10,000 seed pearls; Philip, dashing in naval uniform, stealing proud glances at his bride; the eight bridesmaids (including little Princess Margaret) giggling nervously; and the roar of the crowd lining the Mall as the newlyweds appeared on the Buckingham Palace balcony for their first kiss as husband and wife.
What makes this release particularly emotional is the timing: it arrives just three years after the passing of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022 and a few months after the second anniversary of Prince Philip’s death. For many, watching the 25-year-old Philip beam with joy feels like seeing the late Duke of Edinburgh young and alive once more.

Filmed on 35mm color stock (a rarity and luxury in austerity-era Britain), the footage had remained in private archives for 78 years. Advanced digital restoration has now brought every detail to life: the deep ivory silk of the 13-foot train, the sparkle of the diamond fringe tiara (famously snapped and hastily repaired the morning of the wedding), and even the delicate orange blossoms woven into Elizabeth’s bouquet.
Historians note the wedding came at a pivotal moment. Britain was still reeling from World War II; rationing was in full force, yet the nation rallied to give their future queen a day of splendor. Citizens sent clothing coupons to help make the princess afford her dress, and ingredients for the 9-foot-tall wedding cake arrived as gifts from across the Commonwealth.
As King Charles III continues to navigate his reign, this release feels like a tender gift to the public who adored his mother for seven decades. Social media is already flooded with tears and nostalgia, with one viral comment reading: “She was so young, so happy, and you can actually see the love in their eyes. This is priceless.”
These extraordinary moving images remind us why Elizabeth and Philip’s 73-year marriage became the bedrock of modern monarchy: it began with pure joy on a cold November day in 1947, and now, thanks to this historic release, we can all share in that magic once again.