Melania Trump and Vogue are continuing its alleged beef into 2025 with the outlet's review of her portrait. Has the first lady ever been on the cover?
Channeling her husband Donald Trump’s campaign of portraying strength, she was shot in black and white by Belgian photographer Régine Mahaux. Melania posed in a menswear-inspired tuxedo with contemporary femininity: a tailored black blazer with wide lapels over an unbuttoned white top. It was teamed with a cummerbund and trousers.
While Melania Trump remains an enigmatic figure, her White House portrait provides some insight into how she'll approach the first lady role.
Régine Mahaux, who has been photographing the Trumps since 2008, told Vanity Fair that Melania’s new portrait “didn’t need to be retouched.”
Melania Trump has come under fierce criticism from Vogue for the outfit chosen for her official portrait at the White House. In the article published on January 28, writer Hannah Jackson spared
The official portrait of Melania Trump as the First Lady of the United States has garnered widespread attention around the world. Now, it has been thoroughly analyzed by Hannah Jackson, a fashion journalist from "Vogue" magazine.
Vogue mocked Melania Trump’s official White House portrait, saying her choice of outfit looked more like that of a “freelance magician” than a first lady.
While millions were shoveling snow or hiding out from the Arctic blast in the Northeast, the President-elect Donald Trump and his wife Melania attended a Candlelight Dinner at the National Building Museum Sunday night.
Once again, Melania Trump is telegraphing to the world that we should not expect first lady business as usual. But perhaps we should expect business? The picture, which will top Mrs. Trump’s official web page and make its way to the National Archives,
On Tuesday, the magazine published what's being called a "scathing" take on Melania Trump's White House portrait. I'd, however, contest that it could've been meaner!
The new White House portraits of the first lady and the president tell a story of hard-nosed power and all-encompassing anger.
Regine Mahaux started out shooting Target ads in Minneapolis in the late 1980s, when the musician known as "Prince" lived around the block.