Melania Trump. Beauty (and botox) evolution: the first First Lady with the same smile for 10 years
She has one of those faces that are called "strong face" in jargon and experts say it is caused by an excess of fillers. She professes against retouching, only very skilled in poses in front of flashes. Squinting eyes and a narrow mouth would be her trick to be more photogenic
She is forty-six and a pact with the devil. Indeed, more likely, with an aesthetic doctor. The spotlight is on the new American First Lady, Melania Trump. Ready and up-to-date on the fashion side (clothes and shoes have always been her passion), she has a wardrobe with six zeros in which it will be enough to stretch a few hems to bon ton length (she looks: the style of the new First Lady). The beauty front, on the other hand, is the one to talk about.
Strong beauty, strong features, Melania has behind her a career as a model (not without "skeletons" in déshabillé in the wardrobe) and 11 years in the designer shoes of the perfect wife. Since her official engagement to Trump in 2004, it was just the color of her long dark hair that changed her. The wrinkle-free forehead, the sculpted cheekbones and an increasingly "slit" look defy time. Also striking is the best photographic pose of her: a half smile that does not "uncomfortable" the upper lip but barely reveals the lower teeth.
In a recent interview with GQ, Melania anticipated the criticisms: «A lot of people say that I have done everything to my face, but the reality is that I have done nothing at all. I live a healthy life, I take care of my skin and my body. I'm against Botox and injections. I think they damage the face, but I want to age gracefully, like my mother does ».
However, the photo album of the last twenty years does not confirm the words of the new First. "When her face looks 'stone' it means that it has been (a lot)) treated with fillers or Botox," said Dr. Franklin Rose, a plastic surgeon from Hollywood. "Melania's forehead is very smooth and her cheekbones full, but the real problem is that too dense fillers were used, if not botox, which eliminated the nasolabial lines and folds at the corners of the mouth, thus preventing a smile natural. The eye contour has also undergone the same treatment, contributing to the feline gaze effect. I do not think it is a question of blepharoplasty or mini-lifting, but only of an excessive filling of the natural expressive folds which gave a fake result ».
Melania's counter-answer? La di lei would be a very studied expression, and not the result of an excess of fillers. From 2008, in fact, she would have adopted a precise pose in front of flashes, in jargon "squint", literally, "with squeezed eyes" (and parted lips): the expression would like to be more penetrating and the face more photogenic. First Lady rehearsals officially started, a long time ago. To find the variants, there is time until January.