Melania Trump has achieved something no first lady has in more than a century. By donating her 2025 inaugural gown to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, she becomes the first first lady in over 100 years to have two inaugural dresses in the museum’s prestigious collection.
Standing before the glass case where the ivory silk and black gown is now displayed, she took in the moment and said, “It’s incredible.” The dress joins the cream column she donated from 2017, securing her rare double presence in the First Ladies Collection. The last woman to reach similar territory was Ida McKinley in the late nineteenth century, long before the exhibition took its modern form.
The First Ladies Collection as Historical Record
The First Ladies Collection, founded in 1912, now holds nearly a thousand objects. Mary Lincoln’s purple velvet sits alongside Jacqueline Kennedy’s evening gown and Michelle Obama’s inaugural look, each reflecting a different era and vision of public womanhood. As Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch III noted during the ceremony, “In many ways, the collection is a timeline of American history as much as it is a look at fashion.”
The Design and Its Intent
Melania’s 2025 gown was created by Hervé Pierre, her longtime collaborator. The strapless dress, made of ivory silk crepe, appears restrained at first glance. Black silk bands trace the torso and culminate in a sharp graphic detail across the bodice. The overall effect is clean and controlled.
In her remarks, she emphasized the depth of meaning she associates with the design. “This is more than 50 years of education, experience and wisdom realized with each thread, each stitch, each sharp edge,” she said.
She also addressed the distinctive black detailing on the bodice. “The meticulously formed black shape ‘Z’ on the front bodice summons decades of my early memories, life experiences, and influences. And, all of these stories are tucked deep within its crisp, strong seams—forever.”
Describing the gown’s aesthetic, she added, “This dress speaks with a distinct point of view — a modern silhouette, bold and dignified, and ruthlessly chic.”
From Inaugural Night to National Archive
At the inaugural ball, the gown was paired with a 1955 Harry Winston diamond brooch, reimagined as a choker threaded through a black ribbon. A replica of the jewel is now displayed with the dress in the museum.
Throughout her time as first lady, Melania’s wardrobe often generated as much discussion as her public remarks. Her style has consistently favored sharp tailoring, strong silhouettes, and high-contrast palettes. The black and white composition of the 2025 inaugural gown aligns with that established visual language.
By donating her second inaugural gown, she secures a distinct place within the Smithsonian archive. The dress now stands among garments worn at pivotal moments in American political life, preserved as part of the national collection.
When Fashion Becomes Artifact
It is no longer simply an inaugural dress worn for one evening. It is now an artifact, catalogued and preserved as part of the national collection. In Washington, garments sometimes outlast speeches, and moments outlive administrations.
Behind the glass, the gown no longer belongs to a single night or even a single presidency. It joins a lineage of dresses that quietly chart the evolution of public womanhood in America. What remains is the image: ivory and black, controlled and deliberate, fixed in place as history moves forward around it.
Read the full article here










