The birth of Prince William and his wife Kate's second baby will cap a momentous four years for Britain's golden couple, completing their journey from student sweethearts to regal domesticity.
The couple have cultivated an image as down-to-earth parents ever since William drove his new family home from hospital after the birth of Prince George in 2013, his hands-on approach being in stark contrast to previous generations of royal fathers.
The 32-year-old has proudly boasted of changing George's first nappy, talked about how he balanced sleepless nights with his job as a search and rescue helicopter pilot and admitted "a lot of things affect me differently" since becoming a father.
But the illusion of normality is periodically exposed, such as when it was revealed that taxpayers footed the £4.5 million bill for refurbishing their 20-room Kensington Palace apartment in London.
During a recent engagement in London, Kate reportedly said she was expecting their second child later in April. The prince said he expected the new arrival to be a "game-changer".
George's birth helped change the public perception of Kate, who was described by novelist Hilary Mantel in 2013 as "a shop-window mannequin, with no personality of her own, entirely defined by what she wore".
She has since gained respect for her battles against acute morning sickness, which hospitalised her during her pregnancy with George, and her reported willingness to stand up to the royal family over George's upbringing.
"The desire to do things their way is underscoring all of Kate and William's decisions," People magazine said in a recent edition.
- Living 'normally' -
Despite their glittering 2011 wedding at London's Westminster Abbey, the couple have always been determined to keep their family life private.
They have vowed to bring up their children out of the glare of the media, whom William partly blames for the death of his mother Diana in a car crash in Paris in 1997.
The couple have set up home in Anmer Hall on the grounds of his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II's Sandringham estate in rural eastern England and William has taken up a new job with the local air ambulance that will keep him out of London.
Their deliberate attempts to limit displays of grandiosity have helped attract a new generation of royal support, with support for the monarchy now scraping 80 percent, its highest level in decades.
William and his younger brother Prince Harry suffered through the bitter separation of their parents and the loss of their mother at an early age.
More reserved than Harry, William entered the University of St Andrews in Scotland, where he and Kate met while studying history of art.
The daughter of a businessman and a former air stewardess, the former Catherine Middleton has admitted that she "went bright red" at her first meeting with the second-in-line to the throne in 2001
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