Under the gilded ceilings of the 68th annual Vienna Opera Ball, Lady Eliza Spencer and Lady Amelia Spencer proved once again that coordination is their signature power move.
Held at the legendary Vienna State Opera, the white-tie affair calls for grandeur—and the twin nieces of Princess Diana answered accordingly in metallic strapless gowns that shimmered beneath the ballroom lights.
Eliza opted for molten gold: a copper-beaded dress woven in a textural lattice that caught movement with every step. She paired the gown with matching copper pumps from Aquazzura and elevated the look with classic white opera gloves. Diamond-and-sapphire drop earrings and a coordinating statement necklace amplified the regal mood without overwhelming the silhouette.
Amelia counterbalanced her sister in liquid silver. Her sculptural gown featured a rose-inspired neckline and a sharply contoured bodice, emphasizing architectural polish. Crystal-embellished Aquazzura heels echoed the icy tone of the dress, while black opera gloves introduced graphic contrast. Emerald stud earrings and a diamond-and-emerald choker completed the ensemble with decisive brilliance.

Beauty styling remained symmetrical: luminous skin, defined eyes, and sleek ballerina buns that kept the focus on décolletage and jewels. Side by side, the twins created a deliberate study in gold versus silver—warmth and coolness, reflection and radiance.
Coordinated dressing has become a hallmark for the Spencer sisters. At the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, they embraced opposing monochrome princess gowns—black and white—while in 2024 they paid subtle homage to their late aunt’s iconic “revenge dress” moment at the Fashion Awards in London. Their sartorial dialogue is rarely accidental; it’s calibrated.
Though not working royals, Eliza and Amelia—along with their older sister, Lady Kitty Spencer—remain prominent fixtures on the European fashion and society circuit. As daughters of Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, their aristocratic lineage meets contemporary runway presence with ease.
At the Vienna Opera Ball, that fusion felt especially apt. In a room built for waltzes and chandeliers, the Spencer twins delivered exactly what tradition demands: drama, discipline, and a touch of dynasty.



