The North Portico was steeped in holiday tradition on November 24, 2025, but the towering 18½-foot Christmas tree wasn’t the only thing drawing attention. Instead, the spotlight shifted to the woman welcoming it.
First Lady Melania Trump made her seasonal debut in Washington, D.C., greeting the official White House Christmas tree in a ceremony meant to usher in holiday cheer. Yet what was intended as a classic Americana moment quickly evolved into something else online — a debate over her striking outfit.
The tree — a grand Michigan-grown fir from Korson’s Tree Farms — arrived in a horse-drawn carriage escorted by a military band. Two Clydesdales, Logan and Ben, pulled the carriage, accompanied by three men dressed in vintage suits and top hats. It was an image designed to echo tradition and nostalgia.
The Coat That Sparked a Frenzy
Standing at the steps of the North Portico, Melania Trump greeted the tree with her usual composed grace, calling it “a beautiful tree” while posing for photographers. But while the fir was destined for a place of honor in the Blue Room, the public’s attention locked onto her wardrobe.
Trump wore a crisp winter-white Dior coat, paired with vivid red leather gloves and tartan Manolo Blahnik stilettos. The overall effect — icy elegance accented by bold Christmas hues — instantly ignited social media.
Many viewers were quick to critique.
“She wore her pajama robe,” one commenter quipped. “White bathrobe and red rubber gloves,” another joked. Others insisted she looked like she’d stepped out in a “literal bathrobe.”
But the reactions weren’t all sharp-edged. Admirers chimed in too.
“Melania is rockin’ her plaid stilettos ♥️,” one fan wrote. Another praised, “She has the best shoes. Every. Time.”
Others commented on far more than her footwear, praising her demeanor and presence.
“She is beautiful and sophisticated. Poise and gracefulness,” one person commented. Another claimed, “Elegance is back in the White House.”
Hair Transformation Receives Expert Praise
Her coat wasn’t the only showstopper. Trump debuted a glowing new hair color that immediately caught the attention of stylists.
Suzie McGill, artistic director at Rainbow Room International, praised the “vibrant, lighter shade,” calling it a polished upgrade that brightened Trump’s complexion without overwhelming her look. She noted that the color injected modern warmth while maintaining Trump’s signature elegance.
Kirsty Judge of the Rush Artistic Team described the look as “cinnamon blonde,” a refined blend of tawny beige tones over a warm acorn base, lifted by delicate vanilla-blonde highlights woven throughout for “a burst of brilliance.”
Old Controversies Rekindled
Still, even with Dior tailoring and expertly blended hair color, Trump couldn’t completely escape reminders of past controversies.
The ceremony revived memories of secretly recorded tapes revealed in 2020 on Anderson Cooper 360. The recordings, taken in 2018, captured Trump expressing exhaustion and frustration during a highly scrutinized moment in her husband’s first term.
“I’m working… my [expletive] off on the Christmas stuff… who gives a [expletive] about the Christmas stuff and decorations? But I need to do it, right?” she said in one clip.
In another, she vented about criticism surrounding the administration’s family separation policies, noting differences in public response to previous administrations.
A Friendship Gone Sour
The tapes were recorded by her then–close friend and adviser Stephanie Winston Wolkoff. Their relationship later unraveled, and Wolkoff published a tell-all memoir, Melania and Me, detailing years of private conversations and behind-the-scenes insights about everything from Trump’s marriage to her public duties.
At the time, former chief of staff Stephanie Grisham sharply criticized the recordings, saying Wolkoff had breached trust and sought relevance by breaking her nondisclosure agreement.
Wolkoff’s memoir also revisited the 2017 inauguration investigation, where her event-planning firm reportedly received over $26 million for inaugural activities — including $1.6 million directed to her company, according to documents obtained by CNN.