First lady Melania Trump reintroduced us to President Donald Trump’s America with a fashion choice no one could ignore. She cut a sharp figure in a midnight blue (almost black) silk wool skirt and coat set commissioned by American designer Adam Lippes, framed by the collar of a white silk crepe blouse. And, of course The Hat: handcrafted by American milliner Eric Javits, the boater silhouette was pulled low, casting a shadow over her face and shading her eyes.
If you like the metaphor of fashion as armor, then Melania’s hat is a shield — separating us from them.
Much has been made on social media likening Melania’s hat and outfit to mourning attire. I disagree. The apparently intentional obstruction of her face, all but entirely eliminating our ability to build connection with her as our first lady through our television screens, doesn’t read as somber. The dark palette was not chosen so she would be relegated to the background, unseen in a sea of men’s overcoats. No. This hat feels defiant. If you like the metaphor of fashion as armor, then Melania’s hat is a shield — separating us from them.
The hat, in the boater style, is traditionally a men’s summer hat made of stiff straw. Coco Chanel is credited with elevating the boater hat to a fashion piece for women. Chanel’s first foray into the fashion world was as a milliner, creating boater hats for women that were more streamlined than what was fashionable at the time. According to “The Allure of Chanel” by Paul Morand, Chanel once said, “The women I saw at the race wore enormous loaves on their heads, constructions made of feathers and improvised with fruits and plumes; but worst of all, which appalled me, their hats did not fit on their head.” The boater hat has since become synonymous with political rallies. Although worn at both Republican and Democratic conventions for the past century, boaters have more recently been used to signal in a sitcom that a political storyline has been introduced.
While first ladies have donned hats for public events, including inauguration days, for decades, none are so synonymous with the accessory as Jackie Kennedy. Famously, Jackie wore a pillbox hat to her husband’s snowy Inauguration Day in 1961. That hat, actually fawn-colored and not light blue as was shown in the miscolored photographs from that day, was designed by a then up-and-coming New York City designer Roy Halston Frowick, who went by Halston. The accessory was significant, at least in part, because of how unexpected it was, with pillbox hats decidedly out of vogue in the early ‘60s.








