Culture & Style
A Fascinating History of Diamond Tiaras Off and On the Red Carpet
By Marion Fasel, Updated May 23, 2025
Whether you’re piling on a diamond necklace, bracelet, stud earrings or beyond, diamond jewelry couldn’t be a more glamorous vehicle for freely expressing oneself.

Elizabeth Taylor wore her antique diamond tiara to the 1957 Cannes Film Festival. (Getty Images)
There are rules when it comes to wearing diamond tiaras. Well, at least there are rules among European royalty and society. The red carpet is another story and I will get to that in a moment.
First, the rules about tiaras are simple. Only brides and married women are supposed to wear them. Why you ask? Tradition mainly. According to Geoffrey Munn author of Tiaras: A History of Splendor, the headgear was symbolic of “the crowning of love.”
Meet the Expert

- Rebecca Selva is the Chief Creative Officer of Fred Leighton, a globally recognized authority in vintage and antique jewelry. With over two decades of experience curating and styling historic pieces for red carpets, editorials, and private collectors, she is a trusted expert in period jewelry.
The British royal family, the most high-profile nobles on the planet, have been abiding by the diamond tiara custom for around 150 years. It all began after 1870 when the abundant supply of diamonds discovered at the Kimberley Diamond Mine in South Africa made the gem widely available to crown jewelers. Diamond tiaras swept into royal wedding fashions and those royal wedding tiaras have remained a key element of a bride’s ensemble, like with Fringe Tiara that Princess Beatrice wore on her wedding day.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Elizabeth Taylor’s at the 1957 Cannes Film Festival



Not surprisingly when Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II married Prince Philip in 1953 wearing Queen Mary’s Fringe Tiara, it inspired several Hollywood stars. Elizabeth Taylor frequently and famously flaunted her late 19th century antique diamond tiara—a gift from her third husband, movie producer Mike Todd. In 1957 she wore it to several events including the Cannes Film Festival, the Academy Awards and a pre-Golden Globes party at the Coconut Grove.

By British etiquette standards, Taylor wasn’t technically breaking any rules since she was married when she wore her diamond tiara (no royal title is required to wear one). And more recently, modern red-carpet mavericks have followed suit.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Salma Hayek at the 1997 Oscars

The self-proclaimed queen of the modern diamond tiaras movement is none other than Salma Hayek. At the 1997 Oscars, long before she was married, Hayek wore a vintage diamond tiara from Fred Leighton. The star explained to Vogue how her team responded when she decided to wear the diamond jewel. “Everyone told me I was crazy and that it would be ridiculous, it would be pretentious, and everyone tried to convince me, like my manager, my stylist, and my publicist,” she says. “I wore the tiara anyways, and you know what happened? Everybody started wearing a tiara after that.”
“Everybody” might be a bit of an exaggeration, but there has been a lot of tiara-wearing on the red carpet over the last 23 years. Rebecca Selva from Fred Leighton, who outfitted Salma Hayek’s tiara and helped crown countless others says, “Tiaras provide a fairytale fantasy red carpet moment.”
Red Carpet Tiaras: Scarlett Johansson at the 2005 Oscars

At the 2005 Oscars, Selva made the magic happen for Scarlett Johansson by resetting three vintage star diamond brooches on a tiara frame. “Her stylist at the time, Annabel Tollman, said she was thinking about stars for the jewelry,” remembers Selva. “And it all just came together.”
Red Carpet Tiaras: Deepika Padukone at the 2017 Met Gala

“If someone is apprehensive about wearing a tiara, it’s usually because they don’t want something big towering over their head,” explains Selva. “People don’t generally realize the many ways a tiara can be styled.”
At the 2017 Met Gala, for example, Indian movie star Deepika Padukone breathtakingly transformed a vintage star diamond tiara into a diamond bandeau by wearing it reversed over the top of her head.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Sienna Miller at the 2018 Met Gala

Some celebrities are fearless about making a big statement with tiaras. For the 2018 Met Gala, Sienna Miller put on two vintage diamond tiaras from Fred Leighton. “Sienna’s stylist Kate Young saw the tiaras and said, why don’t we layer them,” remembers Selva. “I loved the idea because it defied expectations and demystified the formality of the jewel.”
There was a bit of work involved, however, in making the layered diamond tiaras look effortless. “We had to wire the tiaras together,” reveals Selva. “You have to tell a tiara where it is supposed to sit.”
Red Carpet Tiaras: Amandla Stenberg at the 2019 Online Film Critics Society Award Ceremony

Rising movie star Amandla Stenberg made the most of a somewhat minor red carpet appearance in 2019 with a dazzling diamond tiara from Beladora. She transformed the treasure into a cool diamond jewel, working it into her braided updo and unexpectedly pairing it with a suit jacket.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Joan Collins at the 2019 Met Gala

Dame Joan Collins paid homage to her iconic character from the 1980s series Dynasty at the 2019 soirée. The star wore a custom ivory silk and feather Valentino Haute Couture gown with a dazzling tiara, diamond chandelier earrings, and a diamond cluster necklace, while she stacked diamond bangles and rings over her white opera gloves.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Salma Hayek at the 2020 Oscars

In the last quarter century, most diamond tiaras on the red carpet have been vintage, namely because few contemporary designers make them. Of course, leave it to Salma Hayek to creatively change that: At the 2020 Oscars, the actress had a pavé set diamond and South Sea pearl laurel wreath necklace by Boucheron worked into her hair so it resembled a pearl and diamond tiara.
Red Carpet Tiaras: Blake Lively at the 2022 Met Gala

Met Gala co-chair Blake Lively looked to iconic New York City landmarks for inspiration when it came to designing her outfit. Her Versace dress honored the Empire State Building and the constellation at Grand Central Station, while her Lorraine Schwartz earrings and tiara were inspired by Lady Liberty. The tiara’s seven tiers represented the seven rays on the Statue of Liberty’s crown, which also features 25 windows that Schwartz incorporated into Lively’s tiara with 25 stones. Schwartz described the look as “Nude color diamonds and Paraiba in a custom tiara, made to resemble the Statue of Liberty, and matching nude diamond earrings.”
Red Carpet Tiaras: Emma Chamberlain at the 2022 Met Gala

In 2022, social media darling Emma Chamberlain attended the Met Gala for the second time, wearing jaw-dropping antique diamond jewelry from Cartier, seeped in a rich and unexpected history. Adding regality to her gilded ensemble, Chamberlain wore the Cartier Diamond Scroll Kokoshnik tiara, originally crafted in 1911. Her hair stylist, Laura Polko even had to thread the tiara into place with two hidden braids close to Chamberlain’s scalp to secure the diamond diadem.
Most significantly, Chamberlain wore a historic natural diamond choker believed to have been previously owned by the Maharaja of Patiala. With white diamond circular rings linked to one abother, each sphere encased magificent yellow diamonds.
You never know, it might have inspired a few contemporary diamond designers to add a tiara to their jewelry collections.