Prince Harry and his fiancee, Meghan Markle, received a rapturous welcome from the people of Nottingham as they began their public life together.
Just a few days after announcing their engagement, the couple were carrying out their first joint royal engagement.
The couple arrived at Nottingham station (Steve Parsons/PA)
The visit aims to raise awareness of HIV/Aids and efforts to tackle youth crime but it also gave the prince the opportunity to showcase his partner to the nation.
Harry chose Nottingham, a city he knows well, for their first walkabout, a mainstay of royal engagements.
The couple, who arrived by train, began their tour with a civic welcome at the National Justice Museum in Nottingham’s historic Lace Market district.
They walked towards a group of dignitaries with one arm around each other’s backs and then moved along the seemingly endless line of well-wishers.
Members of the crowd called out Harry’s name, while others held up camera phones to capture the moment, or stretched out their hands for the prince and his fiancee to shake.
Ms Markle was wrapped up against the cold in a long dark blue coat by Mackage, and boots. She was also without gloves, so her engagement ring was on display, and carried a handbag – something the Duchess of Cambridge rarely does.
At points during the walkabout, Ms Markle put a reassuring hand on Harry’s back and she was given a bunch of cream coloured flowers.
With no private secretary yet, she had to hold the flowers and her handbag in the same hand but carried on greeting well-wishers. A little while later one of Harry’s aide took the blooms from her.
Ms Markle was wrapped up against the cold in a long dark blue coat by Mackage (Steve Parsons/PA)
The former actress soon left her fiancee’s side and walked to the other side of the road to greet hundreds of fans who were crowded behind crash barriers.
She brushed her long hair from her face and smiled broadly as she shook hand after hand.
Ahead of their arrival, hundreds of curious and excited onlookers had packed the streets, including avid fan Irene Hardman.
The 81-year-old is well-known for handing bags of Haribo sweets to Harry, and first presented his father, the Prince of Wales, with two bags – the other for brother William – 20 years ago.
She said: “It is absolutely wonderful and fantastic, and we’re privileged they’ve chosen Nottingham to be their first official engagement.”
Police were out in force ahead of the arrival of the royal couple (Joe Giddens/PA)
The city and its people are close to Harry’s heart, with the visit his third public trip there since October last year.
It is the first official engagement by the couple in what will be a six-month tour of the UK, allowing the American former actress to get to know her new home.