It’s What Hillary Clinton’s Fashion That Matters
As Beyoncé would say who run the world, it would be âGIRLS!â Now, who run this Motha? Yep, thatâs right. We want a female president that believes in womenâs rights and believe in the power of strong independent women. We want someone to be committed and dedicated to their job, also to be a humanitarian and make this world a better place. Women like Hillary Clinton knows how to rule the world and have a killer wardrobe, not leaving out the house without looking her best of the best.
As these presidential elections are rising, Clinton is alongside dressed the par in the latest fashion, well, letâs say best-dressed, for running one of the toughest presidential campaigns in American history. As you can see from the Hillary Street Style Instagram account, the anonymous user made collages of Clinton fashion thatâs more than three decades from the public eye, and it pairs her looks with similar pieces women we see constantly in the spotlight.
You can see Beyoncé in a lemonade jumpsuit while Clinton added pearls and a straw hat back when she attended her daughter, Chelseaâs 2001 graduation from Stanford; Lupita Nyongâo styled her orange look by pairing an oversized Balmain blazer with matching oversized pants and a cropped top for the Late Night Show with Seth Meyers while Michelle Obama wore a red orange pantsuit for a Womenâs Bureau event back in 2010. Emerald Green is such a trendy color, especially in the collage of Julianne Moore in Tom Ford, Angelina Jolie in Versace, and Clinton wearing this color. The Instagrammer behind this account is seriously loving Clintonâs fashion.
She said her farewells to the headband and eyeglasses. There are clearly no signs of her St. John knit skirts or just a simple rotation pantsuit she would casually wear. Now, we donât mind her professionalism from this woman, but if we can get her to be our president, thatâs a huge plus for the fashion world.
Image Slider: Hillary Clinton speaks at the press conference (CC BY-SA 2.0) by Andrea Gjestvang, Utenriksdepartementet