Christina Binkley is an award-winning journalist who writes and comments on fashion and culture. The opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author.
Those were dramatically unfortunate decisions given that they were made on the world stage at moments when her job was clear: to represent the United States.
First Lady Melania Trump sparked backlash when she wore a jacket that read "I don't really care. Do U?" on her way to visit with child migrants on the US-Mexico border. Credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
We all speak volumes through the clothing choices we make. But elected officials and their families, given their public platforms, face particularly harsh scrutiny. (Indeed, the president's billowing suits and taped neckties have earned countless column inches.)
Melania and Donald Trump pose with fashion designer Michael Kors at a party at Jean-George in the West Village in New York in 2005. Credit: Patrick McMullan/Patrick McMullan/Patrick McMullan via Getty Image
Since her husband assumed office, Trump, who says she wears what she likes, has transformed her style remarkably. In the past, her style favored miniskirts and baby-doll dresses. The image of her Raquel Welch-esque figure spilling over the table at Jean-Georges was once typical. But in her current role, Trump has dropped her hems to her shins, and her voluptuous curves have been covered up.
What the public sees of her curves these days is in silhouette, mostly through layers of Ralph Lauren or Dolce & Gabbana. Her new signature look is simultaneously chaste and suggestive, with pencil skirts and tops snugly belted to make the most of her Barbie curves, punctuated with towering stilettos. (It's always the same silhouette, even under the $1,995 Burberry trench coat she wore to arrive in Europe in July.)
Trump walks across the South Lawn with her husband in February 2018. Since becoming First Lady, modest pencil skirts and blouses have become her go-to garments. Credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
Two years later, designers still downplay her associations with their brands. The team at Ralph Lauren, whose clothes she often wears, make it known that the First Lady shops independently, without their involvement.
First Lady Melania Trump wore her signature silhouette to speak about her Be Best program at the Rose Garden of the White House in May. Credit: The Washington Post/Getty Images
It's easy to understand why. When Stefano Gabbana and Domenico Dolce of Dolce & Gabbana, the rare designers who have been vocal about dressing her, tag photos of her on Instagram with #DGWoman, they're roundly criticized on social media.
Trump wore Dolce & Gabbana to Thanksgiving dinner at Mar-a-Lago. At the time, the brand was facing backlash for ads deemed racist against Chinese people. Credit: MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images
Trump's lack of fashion industry support wouldn't seem so remarkable if Michelle Obama wasn't her predecessor.
Trump suffers by comparison. Her wardrobe choices are expensive -- Christian Dior, Roland Mouret, Calvin Klein, Victoria Beckham -- but unchallenging and lacking in point of view.
Michelle Obama wore a gown by emerging American designer Brandon Maxwell to a White House state dinner with Singapore's Ho Ching and her husband, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. Credit: NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images
It can't be denied that Trump had a jarring transition to America's First Lady. While political wives often have decades to become accustomed to their very particular role -- one that offers its own hellish set of contradictory rules requiring them to be both supportive and proactive, traditional and modern -- Trump was thrust into it only after an election whose outcome few predicted. Prior to that, she had an entirely different job as the wife of a bombastic businessman and reality TV host.
However, after two years as First Lady, and a particularly gaffe-filled 2018, Trump must embrace fashion's soft power potential.
As Obama demonstrated, clothes can be used as a tool to champion cherished causes and values. If Trump wants to refocus the conversation on her good deeds, she would be wise to figure out how to do the same.
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