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Camilla parker bowles facelift

What a difference a decade can make. Then came her wedding to the Prince of Wales on April 9, That day marked the start of her decade-long transformation from dowdy fiftysomething to dazzling Duchess. Scroll down for video. Ditching frizz for luscious locks. When they first met, it was often frizzy, unkempt and windswept from days spent outdoors.

These days, Camilla has her hair blow-dried almost every day. For a woman of 67, this makes a massive difference to how she looks. Camilla relies on stylist Hugh Green, from Hugh and Stephen hairdressers in Belgravia, who now works for her full-time, to keep her hair looking glossy and neat.

Did Camilla Parker Bowles undergo facial plastic surgery after her marriage to Prince Charles?

He accompanies her on royal tours, ensuring not a lock is out of place, and has a knack for fixing tiaras and hats, sometimes attaching a piece of fake hair to the crown of her head to keep a heavy headdress in place. Camilla has been visiting high-end London colourist Jo Hansford, who counts Angelina Jolie and Elizabeth Hurley among her clients, for nearly 30 years, but her royal role means she visits more frequently than ever.

She is pictured left at a polo match in and right at a visit of Rudyard Kipling's former home last year. A clever hat trick. Camilla has quite broad shoulders and looks better with a hat than without, but her early headgear choices were dubious. On her initial public forays, she opted for large-brimmed hats with dramatic sprays of feathers, and some, such as her bright blue choice for a outing to Royal Ascot, were gaudy.

She has taken time to get the colour right and now sticks to pastels and creams. Her go-to milliner is royal favourite Philip Treacy, with whom she has worked since he designed her wedding hat.