© 2024
NPR for Northern Colorado
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Clothes Don't Make A First Lady, But They Can Make A Statement

Melania Trump wore a white, one-shouldered Ralph Lauren jumpsuit to her husband's election night rally.
Evan Vucci
/
AP
Melania Trump wore a white, one-shouldered Ralph Lauren jumpsuit to her husband's election night rally.

From head to toe, a first lady's look is heavily scrutinized, and Melania Trump will be no exception. But Trump is no stranger to the spotlight: In 2005, she was on the cover of Vogue in her Dior wedding dress, and she's modeled for Harper's Bazaar and posed nude for GQ. She also once sold her own line of costume jewelry and watches on QVC.

Michelle Obama appeared on <em>The Tonight Show</em> on Oct. 27, 2008, just days before the election.
Kevork Djansezian / AP
/
AP
Michelle Obama appeared on The Tonight Show on Oct. 27, 2008, just days before the election.

With the whole world watching, the first lady can make a fashion statement like no one else. She can also make a difference during the campaign. In October 2008, just days before the election, Michelle Obama appeared on The Tonight Show wearing a mustard yellow sweater and printed silk shirt. When Jay Leno asked her what she was wearing, she told him her outfit was from J. Crew. The audience roared with excitement: "We ladies, we know J.Crew," Obama said knowingly. "You can get some good stuff online."

Chicago boutique owner Ikram Goldman worked as Obama's fashion consultant at the time. She says, "The idea of her being inclusive was very important, and I think it was important to other people who were looking at her to feel like they can have access to that as well."

Obama also championed young American designers like Jason Wu, whose career took off after she wore his one-shouldered, white chiffon gown to President Obama's 2009 inaugural balls. Goldman helped select the gown but kept it a secret until that night. She says when Wu saw it on TV, he called her. "He was crying. He was shocked. He was happy. He couldn't believe it," Goldman remembers.

Barack and Michelle Obama attend the Neighborhood Inaugural Ball on Jan. 20, 2009. The first lady wore a gown by Jason Wu.
Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
/
Getty Images
Barack and Michelle Obama attend the Neighborhood Inaugural Ball on Jan. 20, 2009. The first lady wore a gown by Jason Wu.

Obama was embraced by the fashion industry, but Melania Trump comes from it. A former model, Trump seems to have a preference for European designers. She's often seen wearing such luxury brands such as Gucci and Dolce & Gabbana, most of which she reportedly bought off the rack.

"Expensive" and "body conscious" are among the first words Robin Givhan uses when asked to describe Trump's style. Givhan, a Pulitzer Prize-winning fashion critic for The Washington Post, says, "It speaks to a bank account; it speaks to a particular kind of social life; and it speaks to a particular tribe of women who exist in New York, in particular. ... They lead very comfortable lives. ... They have both the time and the energy to attend to themselves." Givhan says Trump's look has "a polish to it, a glamour to it, but not in a particularly personal or individual way."

Like Michelle Obama before her, Melania Trump's choices are already making an impact. For her speech at the Republican National Convention this summer, Trump wore an ivory, cotton and silk dress with sleeves that billowed at the elbows. The $2,195 dress (by Serbian-born designer Roksanda Ilincic) reportedly sold out in the days following Trump's speech.

Melania Trump delivered her Republican National Convention speech in a $2,195 dress by Serbian-born designer Roksanda Ilincic.
Timothy A. Clary / AFP/Getty Images
/
AFP/Getty Images
Melania Trump delivered her Republican National Convention speech in a $2,195 dress by Serbian-born designer Roksanda Ilincic.

Meanwhile, retailers in Washington, D.C., are getting ready for a very different style of first lady. The ladies consignment shop Inga's Once Is Not Enough is something of an institution in the nation's capital, especially for women who need to dress for high-powered, formal events on a federal government salary. Sorting through the racks, owner Inga Guen says she would love to dress Melania Trump. She pulls out an olive green Oscar de la Renta dress, hand-embroidered with ivory beading, and a black cashmere jacket with a fur collar by Valentino. "She would look très chic — très, très, très chic — in this," Guen says.

Guen describes Trump's style as daring and slightly eccentric with a European sensibility. She says she's already had three new clients come into her shop who've been hired by the new administration. "I have no idea how they heard about me, but I dressed them and they were so, so very happy to have met Melania Trump," she says. Asked whether their style was anything like Trump's, Guen replies, "Au contraire, it was not similar to her at all. But I said, 'We have to put a little bit of oomph in your wardrobe right now, we have to be a little bit glamourous.' "

Guen hopes to do business with Trump, but the fashion industry is splitting at the seams over whether to work with her. Some designers have said absolutely not; others say it would be an honor to dress any first lady.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Elizabeth Blair is a Peabody Award-winning senior producer/reporter on the Arts Desk of NPR News.