Posing in their garden at home with their dog Lupo, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and their children, George and Charlotte, make a picture-perfect family in the candid GQ magazine shoot.
Prince William, who is the magazine's cover star, opens up about family life, how he wished his late mother could have met Kate and the children and how it's taken him 20 years to come to terms with her death.
The royal father-of-two says his grief is different to other people's because 'everyone knows the story'. He adds that he wishes Princess Diana, who was killed in a tragic car accident in 1997 when Prince William was 15, was around to watch his children grow up and says he will 'fight' for them to have a normal life.
'I could not do my job without the stability of the family,' says William in the poignant interview. 'Stability at home is so important to me. I want to bring up my children in a happy, stable, secure world and that is so important to both of us as parents.
'I want George to grow up in a real, living environment, I don’t want him growing up behind palace walls, he has to be out there. I will fight for them to have a normal life.'
The royal, who was discussing his mother's tragic death in 1997 and the issue of mental health as part of the Heads Together campaign, revealed that he's in one of the best places he's been - but it's taken him 20 years to get there.
'It has taken me almost 20 years to get to that stage,' he admitted. 'I still find it difficult now because at the time it was so raw. And also it is not like most people’s grief, because everyone else knows about it, everyone knows the story, everyone knows her.
'I would like to have had her advice. I would love her to have met Catherine and to have seen the children grow up. It makes me sad that she won’t, that they will never know her.'
Dressed down in jeans, pumps and a jumper, 34-year-old Kate laughs into the camera whilst Princess Charlotte, two, and Prince George, three, play in the grass. Prince William, who dons a casual shirt and jeans, reclines in the grass in the image captured by iconic snapper, Norman Jean Roy.
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