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Melania Trump’s Unexpected Easter Look

April 6, 2026
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Melania Trump’s Unexpected Easter Look

And thus the White House’s 250th-anniversary celebrations begin with a special Easter egg roll — and a special effort from the first lady to dress the part.

Could it be a sign of what is to come?

Since her husband’s first election, Melania Trump has largely written her own rulebook about what it means to be first lady. She tossed aside the old dictates about using the office to support American fashion, instead favoring European luxury labels, the better to embody the new gilded age her husband promised.

(And, perhaps, to clap back at the American labels that once upon a time made a big ruckus about refusing to dress the Trumps and at the designers who conspicuously supported the other guy during the 2020 election.)

But on Monday, as the first lady joined the president and the Easter Bunny on the Truman balcony of the White House to welcome guests to a party with what her office termed “special patriotic spirit,” she did so in a navy safari jacket and a white T-shirt.

If it wasn’t fully red, white and blue, it was at least white and blue; if it wasn’t exactly pastels and chickadees, it was very Hyannis Port, yacht-club-coded. And the name on the label was the most American of all American brands: Ralph Lauren.

Not only has Mr. Lauren built an empire on selling the world a soft-focus and star-spangled version of the American dream, in its preppy East Coast form and its rugged Wild Wild West incarnation, but he also has long been the outfitter of the American Olympic team and gave the Smithsonian $13 million for the restoration of the Star-Spangled Banner.

He even turned the flag itself into a best-selling piece of knitwear, and in 2025 became the first fashion designer to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom (though that was during the Biden administration).

This is not the first time Mrs. Trump has worn Ralph Lauren. The designer famously, and somewhat controversially, made the light blue dress and bolero Mrs. Trump wore to channel Jacqueline Kennedy at her husband’s first inauguration, in 2017. The label’s position at the time was that it was an honor to dress the office of first lady, no matter who was first lady. More recently Mrs. Trump wore a black Ralph Lauren tuxedo to the Alfalfa Club dinner and a suede safari jacket on the last day of the Trumps’ state visit to Britain.

Despite all that, however, Mrs. Trump has opted for labels like Dolce & Gabbana for most of her major public appearances. She wore a Dolce & Gabbana suit for her official portrait and to the premiere of her documentary at the Kennedy Center and at the recent State of the Union. Also Dior, which she wore for her arrival at Windsor Castle on the first day of the Trumps’ British state visit and for the last day of the Republican convention.

The first lady has long used her clothing to talk for her (and not just when she put actual words on her jacket in 2018). But she has always seemed more interested in advertising her own taste, especially as it relates to her personal brand, than advertising any kind of national industry.

Which is why the decision to wear Ralph Lauren for an event billed as part of the 250th-anniversary rollout was so notable. Along with Mrs. Trump’s freshly blond highlights, it was the most striking element of the day. And it at least suggested an attempt at a patriotic gesture, even if Mrs. Trump did pair the jacket and T-shirt with white wide-leg Dolce & Gabbana pants.

For Mrs. Trump to follow the Lauren look by wearing pieces from other American designers for the various semiquincentennial events scheduled this year has the potential to transform the first lady’s participation in such public rituals, silent and symbolic though it may be, from a statement solely about her own and her husband’s image-making to one about the economy. To represent not just her own style but also American style. Once upon a time that was considered part of the job. Now, it would be a surprise.

Vanessa Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times since 2014.

The post Melania Trump’s Unexpected Easter Look appeared first on New York Times.

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