New York Times Fashionのインスタグラム(nytstyle) - 10月9日 03時02分


During Melania Trump's first solo trip abroad, the first lady @flotus said people should focus on what she does, not what she wears. But she still seems dedicated to dressing a part. Within minutes, her remark was all over social media, along with a picture of her wearing a sand-colored Ralph Lauren jacket, a white Chanel shirt with a black tie, and a cream fedora. It’s a familiar plaint, one often issued by Hillary Clinton. It was almost surprising that Mrs. Trump didn’t follow it up with the usual corollary: If I were a (first) man, you wouldn’t care about my clothes. But the fact is, chafe against it as she will, what she does is inextricably bound up in what she chooses to wear while doing it, and the same would be true of anyone in that role. After all, that’s what you see in the pictures, and the pictures are what most people see first. The clothes are simply a symbol of the actions, and the actor. Is it superficial? No more than paying attention to any kind of symbolism is, writes New York Times fashion director Vanessa Friedman. Read more, link in bio. Photograph by @nytmills in Cairo, Egypt.


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