After playing with the name - and realizing that very soon the little one will have a face, be a toddler, start speaking, and all the rest - in short, be a darling person connected to the name - the name will be (and is) fine.
My mother's name was Stella. The name was popular a century ago (why films and tv shows use it to indicate 'age') and then for a long period fell into dis-usue until Paul McCartney named one of his daughters Stella - and it, and its variations, has had a come-back.
I am reminded that apparently the King told Victoria regarding marriage that - in so may words - it was wisest to marry for love rather than dynastic reasons, because one has one's life for all of one's life - being royal can end - one never knows what the future will bring. Good, sensible advice.
So it must be regarding naming one's children. In the end, one's life is the most important because being royal can vaporize in the moods - and a vote - of a populace. Satisfy oneself - which looks like Victoria and Daniel have done while still keeping to within family tradition.
Queen Elizabeth once referred to the Scandinavian and Continental monarchies as 'bicycle monarchies'. In the end, these monarchies have modernized more seamlessly it seems than the British one that is so tradition bound. They are more part of the real-world life. Princes marrying educated and career women are the norm. Princes - and Princesses - themselves, have significant jobs in the world - and as it turns out, are still able to show off with plenty of bling and majesty and pomp for the right occasions. They seem less prisoners of their royal roles. (I could be mistaken but when you hear about the whole Swedish family going food shopping together on Sunday afternoons - you know something is different).
Many pages back, some posters were commenting on what a 'common' name Estelle was and that the British monarchy would never stoop so 'low'. Yet it might be a good thing for them to so do.
What better way to 'modernize' the monarchy than to have a future King Trevor-James?