Success for King Charles III: Thanks to Meghan, his jam is sold out

Success for King Charles III.
Thanks to Meghan, his jam is sold out

Duchess Meghan is promoting her own jam and is apparently boosting King Charles’ online shop.

© Stephen Lock/i-Images/eyevine/Thomas Cordy/The Palm Beach Post/USA Today Network/ddp

Meghan is currently promoting her new lifestyle brand’s jam. But at the moment someone else is unexpectedly benefiting from this: King Charles.

In mid-March, Duchess Meghan (42) launched her new brand “American Riviera Orchard”, and now she is apparently in the process of promoting her first product: a strawberry jam. Friends and influencers posted photos on Instagram of a jar of strawberry jam that Prince Harry’s (39) wife gave them. But that has According to the Daily Mail, this apparently had a rather unintended side effect for another member of the British Royal Family: King Charles III. (75).

The British monarch has been selling jam from the lands of the Duchy of Cornwall since the 1990s. The jam is made from the fruit harvest in the gardens of his private home in Highgrove.

King Charles’ strawberry jam is sold out

With Meghan promoting her own jam via Instagram, Charles’ online shop appears to be seeing a surge in sales. Some products are currently sold out: including the Highgrove strawberry jam and the Highgrove orange jam, each priced at just under seven British pounds per jar (around eight euros). Meghan’s products, on the other hand, are not yet available to the general public.

The Duchess of Sussex is not just working on establishing a jam brand. She apparently has plans to establish a large lifestyle brand with “American Riviera Orchard” with all kinds of products. According to People, the US Patent and Trademark Office received several trademark applications from Meghan at the beginning of March.

Is Meghan planning a lifestyle empire?

Apparently, she wants to sell goods in almost all lifestyle areas in the future, including cosmetic products, home accessories, stationery, bedding, small kitchen appliances, spices, yoga equipment, gardening tools, pet accessories, tableware and jarred food products. The foods listed include wine, honey, dried fruits, coffee, tea and sauces, as well as sweets such as cookies.

According to “People”, the registrations for various beauty products are particularly noticeable. In addition to the above-mentioned goods, the Duchess of Sussex also wants to launch skin care, cosmetics and fragrance items. In addition to scented and lavender sachets, the trademark application also includes non-medical skin care preparations, bath and shower gels as well as salts for non-medical purposes, non-medical hair preparations, bath soap, bar soap, non-medical hand soaps, body creams, bath oil, body lotion, fragrance oils and room fragrances called.

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