Day eight of the Wimbledon Championships saw Carole Middleton and Pippa Matthews, the mother and sister of the Princess of Wales, make a high-profile appearance at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.
The mother-daughter duo arrived in style to take in the action during the tournament's critical round of 16.
Attendees at the grounds today witnessed a packed schedule of elite tennis, with matchups including Marie Bouzková facing off against Elise Mertens, alongside highly anticipated doubles action featuring the pairings of Wang Xinyu and Hsieh Su-wei, as well as Guo Hanyu alongside Kristina Mladenovic.
Both women opted for bright, summer-ready ensembles for their afternoon at the Championships. Mrs Matthews and Mrs Middleton could be seen walking side-by-side through the Wimbledon grounds.
Mrs Matthews, 42, caught the attention of fashion onlookers wearing a £278 white midi sundress adorned with a playful red poppy print, sourced from the sustainable fashion brand Reformation.
She paired the look with neutral heels, dark sunglasses, and carried a cream straw hat with a red band.
Walking beside her, Mrs Middleton opted for a classic combination, sporting a vibrant blue linen blazer over a white V-neck maxi dress, accessorised with white ballet flats and a tan leather handbag.
Mrs Middleton, 71, was last seen in public supporting her eldest daughter, Catherine, The Princess of Wales.

She joined her family in meeting Catherine at the base of Snowdon in Wales after the princess successfully completed the gruelling National Three Peaks Challenge.
The Princess of Wales climbed Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike, and Snowdon within a 24-hour window to raise funds and awareness for the Royal Marsden Cancer Charity.
Mrs Middleton, alongside her husband Michael and son James, greeted Catherine at the finish line following the solo mountain endurance test.

While Mrs Matthews enjoyed a day at the tennis, she and her husband, James Matthews, continue to face an ongoing local feud back home in Berkshire.
The couple is currently locked in a highly publicised dispute with village residents over public access to their £20million Barton Court estate.
After purchasing the 145-acre property in 2022, Mr Matthews installed electric gates and erected "No Public Access" signs along Mill Lane, a pathway cutting through the estate grounds.

Local villagers and walking groups, including the West Berkshire Ramblers, have expressed outrage, claiming the lane has been used uninterrupted for decades as a safe pedestrian link to Kintbury village.
The dispute has escalated to a public Planning Inspectorate inquiry to determine whether the route constitutes a legal public right of way.
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