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17 May 2012
Last updated at
06:08
In pictures: Half a million gold buttons for the Queen
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A 9ft (3m) by 9ft velvet banner sewn with over half a million gold buttons is being made to decorate the stern of the Royal Barge, Spirit of Chartwell. It will be at the front of the Thames Diamond Jubilee pageant on 3 June.
The banner has been made by artist and sculptor Ann Carrington (left). It depicts a crown, flanked by a lion and unicorn, and carries the royal motto "Dieu et mon droit" - "God and my right". The names and dates of past coronations are still to be sewn around the edge.
Some naval buttons have been used in the design to echo the tradition of east London pearly kings and queens. According to legend, it began when a Japanese ship carrying a cargo of pearl buttons floundered in the Thames. The buttons washed up on the banks and were gathered by locals who stitched them to their clothes.
The pageant organisers say Ms Carrington's involvement in the Jubilee celebrates modern artists as well as traditional craftsmen.
The banner is so heavy it has to be hung using a forklift truck.
To get the design of the banner approved, Ms Carrington had to go to the College of Arms which is responsible for all of the UK鈥檚 heraldry.
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