Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

First lady gives inaugural gown to Smithsonia­n

Herve Pierre creation joins popular exhibit

- By Catherine Lucey

WASHINGTON — Melania Trump knew her inaugural gown would be part of history and she had a clear vision for her look, asking the designer for something “modern, sleek, light, unique and unexpected.”

The resulting vanilla silk, off-theshoulde­r gown is now part of the First Ladies Collection at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n. Trump officially donated the couture piece Friday at the National Museum of American History and it has been added to the popular exhibit that features dresses worn by Jacqueline Kennedy, Laura Bush, Michelle Obama and others.

Calling it a “daunting task” to select a dress that will be part of history, Trump said, “It is now my hope that this piece is one of the many great beginnings to our family’s history here in Washington, D.C.”

The gown, designed by Herve Pierre in collaborat­ion with Trump, featured a slit skirt, ruffled accent trim from the neckline to the hem and a claret ribbon around the waist. The first lady wore it as she accompanie­d President Donald Trump to celebrator­y balls on Jan. 20.

Trump said after her husband was elected, the family was so busy with the transition that “to be honest what I would wear to the inaugural ball was the last thing on my mind.” She said Pierre, who attended the event and also serves as a stylist, had just two weeks to create the gown.

But she added that he “exceeded my expectatio­ns.”

Pierre, the former creative director of Carolina Herrera, said it was a fast process, but that “a good conversati­on, a good collaborat­ion leads to something very good.”

Trump, who officially moved to Washington in June, has been growing more comfortabl­e in her first lady role of late, making a solo trip to Canada to cheer Americans participat­ing in an athletic competitio­n for wounded service members and veterans and visiting a West Virginia care center for babies born dependent on opioids.

A former model, Mrs. Trump has been closely watched for her fashion choices. During a two-day visit to Paris over the summer, she wowed the French in a flame-red skirt suit by Parisian fashion house Christian Dior. The first lady and Pierre picked it to celebrate Dior’s 70th anniversar­y this year.

Pierre said the two are working on her looks for an upcoming trip to Asia.

“The key for me to be elegant, it’s not only to only to have a beautiful dress, it’s to be right for the occasion,” he said.

But Trump has also been subject to scrutiny. On the president’s first trip to Texas after the hurricane, the first lady’s decision to wear stilettos as she left the White House was panned on social media. She changed into sneakers for the arrival of Air Force One in Corpus Christi.

The president defended his wife’s shoe choice, saying in an interview with former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee on Trinity Broadcasti­ng Network that she has “taken tremendous abuse.”

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais The Associated Press ?? First lady Melania Trump donates her inaugural gown, designed by Herve Pierre, left, to the First Ladies Collection at the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of American History during a ceremony Friday in Washington.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais The Associated Press First lady Melania Trump donates her inaugural gown, designed by Herve Pierre, left, to the First Ladies Collection at the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of American History during a ceremony Friday in Washington.

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