Kate Middleton is putting her photography skills to use. The Duchess of Cambridge invited two Holocaust survivors and their grandchildren to take their photographs for an upcoming exhibit. The goal of the exhibit is to pay tribute to the harrowing stories of the survivors.

Middleton's photos, which she also uploaded to Instagram in two separate posts on Sunday, mark 75 years since the end of the Holocaust. Holocaust survivors Steven Frank and Yvonne Bernstein were photographed for the project, celebrating their lives and stories that “will stay with [Middleton] forever.”

The two were photographed separately alongside their grandchildren Maggie and Trixie Fleet and Chloe Wright, respectively. Alongside their grandkids, the survivors also posed alongside items of theirs that carry "personal significance," the Instagram posts stated.

“I wanted to make the portraits deeply personal to Yvonne and Steven,” Middleton wrote in one of the posts. “A celebration of family and the life that they have built since they both arrived in Britain in the 1940s.”

The Royal Photographic Society, for which Middleton is an honorary member, as well as the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust and Jewish News teamed up for the honorary project. The exhibition put on by the aforementioned organizations will feature the images and will open later this year, reports Today.

According to Grazia, the British royal has always had an interest in photography. Middleton was even recognized for some of her artistic prowess when she published photos she had taken of her children she shares with husband Prince William.

Kate Middleton
Kate Middleton visits The Foundling Museum on March 19, 2019 in London. Getty Images/Eddie Mulholland