It was a trip down memory lane for many in the chiffon-and-pearl set at the inaugurationof the exhibition of the recently-discovered princely portraits from Bond Street’sfamous Lafayette Studio, currently showing at Delhi’s British Council. There wasMaharani Gayatri Devi, gazing at her grandparents, and at the handsome young Maharajah ofCooch Behar who eloped with her mother, the Princess of Gaekwad, much to her father’sdispleasure. And the Rani of Mikha peering at the full-length portrait of her mother, theRani of Mandi. "I’ve never seen this picture of hers before," she mused, asshe gazed at the tall elegant figure who had left the palace to live in Paris when herdaughter was only four years old. "The Rani’s conspicuous lack of jewels is instark contrast to her father (Maharaja Jagatjit Singh of Kapurthala) who spent up to aquarter of his revenue annually buying swags of pearls and emeralds for himself,"says Russell Harris, curator of this exhibition. Taken at the height of princely passionfor all things English, these early 1900 portraits from the Lafayette Studio, famous forits studio portraits of court debutants and visiting royalty, reveal another royalpassion: for fabulous gems and medallions...