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King Charles to attend first ever King's Foundation awards at St James's Palace later today to recognise those who have helped its charity work

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King Charles III will attend the inaugural The King's Foundation awards today to recognise those who have contributed to its charitable work.

The event at St James's Palace in London aims to showcase the work of students, teachers, alumni and partners who have helped the organisation.

Charles's diary remians busy after he travelled to France for the D-Day 80th anniversary commemorations last week despite his cancer treatment continuing.

Yesterday, the King was at Windsor Castle for a ceremony which saw him present new colours to the Irish Guards and inspect the guardsmen and officers on parade.

He will also have a high-profile appearance at Trooping the Colour in London this Saturday, then attend the annual Garter Day service at Windsor Castle next Monday.

King Charles III presents new colours to the Irish Guards at Windsor Castle yesterday

Charles will attend The King's Foundation awards at St James's Palace in London (file image)

Today's foundation awards ceremony, which is set to become an annual fixture in The King's Foundation calendar, will see awards presented across nine categories.

And it will culminate in The King Charles III Harmony Award being given to an individual to recognise their long-term commitment to the charity's mission.

The ceremony will also feature live demonstrations of the foundation's education programmes, showcasing furniture making, woodworking and embroidery, as well as the charity's architecture and placemaking work.

The King will speak to students and ambassadors at these demonstrations, hearing how the foundation has supported learning and entrepreneurship across traditional arts, textiles, rural skills, and health and wellbeing.

As part of this, he will see the impact of the foundation's education programmes from the Snowdown School of Furniture, the Métier d'Arts Embroidery Fellowship in partnership with Chanel and Le19M and the Future Textiles offering.

A photo released on June 1 of Charles with David Beckham, who was announced as a new ambassador for The King's Foundation, at the Highgrove estate in Gloucestershire

King Charles III meets students, tutors and graduates during a Celebration of Craft reception at Highgrove Gardens in Tetbury hosted by The King's Foundation on December 8, 2023

The organisation, based at Dumfries House in East Ayrshire, is the custodian of the Highgrove Gardens in Gloucestershire and Castle of Mey in Caithness.

It offers workshops, programmes and short courses focused on heritage and craft skills at its Barley Court education centre on the Highgrove estate.

And it aims to revitalise communities through urban regeneration and planning, and support sustainable food production and teach rural skills.

The King's Foundation is a charity founded by Charles when he was Prince of Wales in 1990.

The charity offers education courses for almost 15,000 students annually, and health and wellbeing programmes for nearly 2,000 people every year.

It also works on placemaking and regeneration projects in the UK and overseas with the aim of revitalising communities and historic buildings.

Charles laughs with Ian Thackray, a blacksmith who realises his hands are too dirty to shake hands with the King, during a Celebration of Craft event at Highgrove on December 8, 2023

And the foundation carries out work at educational and cultural hubs in London, based at The King's Foundation School for Traditional Arts in Shoreditch, Trinity Buoy Wharf on the River Thames and the Garrison Chapel in Chelsea.

In addition to its UK presence, the foundation delivers programmes and projects in more than a dozen sites abroad.

Last November, Buckingham Palace announced that the King's long-standing charities had been rebranded in recognition of his accession to the throne,

As the Prince of Wales, Charles set up the youth charity the Prince's Trust; the Prince's Foundation and the grant-giving Prince of Wales's Charitable Fund (PWCF).

But 14 months after he became monarch and a week ahead of his 75th birthday, the palace announced the organisations' names had been updated to become The King's Trust, The King's Foundation and King Charles III Charitable Fund.

A photo from the foundation of a furniture student at Barley Court workshops in Highgrove 

Charles once spoke of his hope his two sons William and Harry, now the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Sussex, would take over the Prince's Trust, which he set up with his Navy severance pay in 1976.

But William is paving his own way as the new heir to the throne, focusing on homelessness and mental health.

Harry, amid continued fractures in family relations after his Netflix documentary and autobiography Spare, is living thousands of miles away in the US with his wife Meghan Markle having quit as a working royal.

The switch in name to The King's Foundation meant the monarch could keep the organisation and the two others firmly under his wing, despite the demands of his role as King.

The changes also gave something of a fresh start to the former Prince's Foundation in the wake of the cash-for-honours allegations.

The King's Foundation is the custodian of the Highgrove Gardens - pictured on May 7

The Metropolitan Police launched an investigation in February 2022 following a series of newspaper articles accusing Michael Fawcett, formerly the foundation's chief executive and a close confidant of the King, of promising to help a Saudi billionaire donor achieve British citizenship and a knighthood.

But detectives investigating the claims announced in August last year that they were taking no further action.

The foundation's recent initiatives have included a Winter Warmers drive with free hot drinks and soup and craft activities at Charles's country estate Highgrove to help combat loneliness and the cost-of-living crisis.

It also collaborated on a luxury fashion line with Yoox Net-A-Porter – as part of its Modern Artisan project, which gives students from the UK and Italy the chance to design and make the sustainable line of outfits as part of a textiles skills training initiative.

Last week it was announced that former England football captain David Beckham had been named a King's Foundation ambassador.

Beckham was confirmed as an official supporter of the organisation a few weeks after he met the monarch privately to learn more about its work.

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