Dressed head-to-toe in a festive  berry shade the Duchess of Cambridge couldn't stop beaming as she  celebrated her first Christmas at Sandringham.
All eyes were on the 29-year-old as she attended a community service with her husband, Prince William yesterday morning.
She teamed a simple knee-length frock coat with black £180 platforms from LK Bennett, but the real head turner was a hat by milliner Jane Corbett, who regularly creates pieces for the Middleton family.
A  pair of diamond drop earrings – possibly a Christmas present - were  also on display as she wore her hair in a half up, half down creation 
Other  members of the royal family who attended the private service included  the Queen, the Countess of Wessex, Prince Charles, the Duchess of  Cornwall, Prince Harry and the Duke of Cambridge.
Kate's  presence helped attract a record 3,000 well-wishers to St Mary  Magdalene church on the Norfolk estate and police were on hand to manage  crowds.
The Queen  opted for a lavender wool boucle coat by her dressmaker Karl Ludwig,  upon which she had pinned a diamond shell brooch with a pearl at the  centre, with a matching white and ivory hat by Angela Kelly.
She  accepted dozens of bouquets helped by three of her grandchildren,  Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie and the Wessexes’ daughter Lady Louise  Windsor.
Zara Philips, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie also looked elegant in understated ensembles.with clutch bags to hand.
Zara  – who now uses the surname Tindall – attended the traditional event with her husband,  Mike, wearing a black collared coat topped with a black ruched hat.
Sisters  Beatrice and Eugenie, who accompanied their father Prince Andrew, both  selected smart double breasted pea coats in shades of black and grey accessorised with matching berets.
Many  were eager to hear about Prince Philip's health after the 90-year-old  was admitted to Papworth Hospital in Cambridge last Friday after  suffering chest pains.
Greeting members of the public, Prince Charles told Carmilla Fitt, 71, from Dover, that his father’s health  was ‘coming on’. He added: ‘He is very well and in very good spirits. He is very determined.’ 
Asked by other wellwishers about his grandfather, the Duke of Cambridge said  he was ‘very well, 

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