Ella Emhoff
Ella Rose Emhoff (born May 29, 1999) is an American model, artist, and designer, recognized primarily as the daughter of Douglas Emhoff, former Second Gentleman of the United States, and stepdaughter of Kamala Harris, who served as Vice President from 2021 to 2025.[1][2] Born in Los Angeles to Douglas Emhoff, an entertainment lawyer, and Kerstin Emhoff, a film producer, she experienced her parents' divorce in 2008 and subsequently met Harris through her father's relationship, leading to their marriage in 2014.[1][2] Emhoff pursued education in the arts, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Parsons School of Design in New York City in May 2021, specializing in apparel and textiles with a focus on knitwear and striped designs.[1][3] Her entry into modeling followed shortly after the January 2021 presidential inauguration, where her appearance in a Miu Miu coat drew media notice, leading to a contract with IMG Models and runway debuts for brands such as Proenza Schouler.[4][5] As an artist, she has exhibited works emphasizing personal craftsmanship, though her professional visibility has been amplified by familial proximity to national politics rather than independent accolades.[2][6] Emhoff's public profile has included appearances at high-profile events like the Met Gala and associations with fashion houses, but it has also attracted scrutiny, including online criticism of her style and modeling suitability, as well as indirect ties to controversies such as Balenciaga's 2022 advertising campaign, which faced backlash for suggestive imagery involving children.[1][7][8] Following the 2024 presidential election, she addressed rumors of personal distress and detractors publicly, emphasizing resilience amid heightened visibility.[9]
Family Background
Parents and Stepfamily
Ella Rose Emhoff was born on May 29, 1999, in Los Angeles to Douglas Emhoff, an entertainment lawyer, and Kerstin Emhoff (née Mackin), a film producer who founded the production company Prettybird.[1][10][1] Her parents divorced in 2009 after separating several years earlier, when Emhoff was approximately 10 years old; Doug Emhoff has acknowledged an extramarital affair during the marriage as a contributing factor.[11][12] In 2014, Doug Emhoff married Kamala Harris, then California's Attorney General, in a courthouse ceremony in Santa Barbara on August 22; this union made Ella Emhoff and her brother Cole the stepchildren of Harris, who ascended to the vice presidency in January 2021 and thereby elevated the blended family to the status of the Second Family of the United States during the Biden administration.[13][14] Kerstin Emhoff has maintained an amicable relationship with her ex-husband and Harris, describing Harris as a "loving, nurturing" co-parent since the children were teenagers and crediting the arrangement with fostering a supportive blended family dynamic, including joint family events.[15][16]Siblings and Upbringing
Ella Emhoff has one sibling, an older brother named Cole Emhoff, born circa 1995. Cole has worked in the film industry, including as an executive assistant at Plan B Entertainment, a production company co-founded by Brad Pitt, and has credits on projects such as Minari (2020) and She Said (2022). He has generally avoided the media spotlight in comparison to his sister.[17][18][19] Emhoff grew up in an affluent neighborhood in Los Angeles, where her family's ties to the entertainment sector provided early exposure to creative environments; her father, Douglas Emhoff, is an entertainment lawyer, while her mother, Kerstin Emhoff (née Mackin), is a film producer who founded the production company Prettybird. This setting, amid private schooling and industry networks, shaped a childhood centered in Southern California until her mid-teens.[20][10][21] Her parents' marriage ended in divorce in 2008, introducing changes to family dynamics and stability during her early adolescence, though the split was described in contemporary accounts as amicable with ongoing co-parenting. In 2014, when Emhoff was 15 and entering her senior year of high school, her father married Kamala Harris, forming a blended family that required adjustments for the siblings, including shared time across households and integration with Harris, whom they nicknamed "Momala." The transition maintained family cohesion, with Emhoff later reflecting on the supportive role of her stepmother amid the evolving structure.[22][14][23]Education
Secondary Education
Ella Emhoff attended Wildwood School, a progressive independent K-12 institution in Los Angeles, California, for her secondary education.[24] The school, founded in 1972, maintains a curriculum focused on experiential learning, interdisciplinary projects, and student-centered inquiry across subjects including arts and humanities. Emhoff completed her high school studies there without reported academic disruptions or major awards.[24] At Wildwood, Emhoff participated in extracurricular athletics, including membership on the varsity basketball team during her high school years and involvement in swimming.[25] These activities aligned with the school's emphasis on collaborative and physical development alongside intellectual growth. The institution's Los Angeles location provided a stable educational environment amid her family's 2009 parental divorce, with no documented changes in her schooling enrollment.[24]Higher Education at Parsons
Emhoff enrolled at Parsons School of Design, part of The New School in New York City, in 2017 after graduating from high school in Los Angeles.[26] This relocation shifted her from a West Coast upbringing to New York's concentrated fashion and arts ecosystem, where she pursued a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[24] Her coursework emphasized fine arts with a concentrated focus on apparel and textiles, involving hands-on techniques such as machine knitting, crochet, hand knitting, and pattern-making.[2] [27] These skills enabled the creation of custom knitwear pieces, including sweater vests, pants, and headpieces, drawing inspiration from personal artifacts like adolescent diaries and relics.[27] Emhoff completed her degree requirements amid the COVID-19 pandemic, participating in a virtual commencement on May 14, 2021.[3] [28] Her senior thesis exhibition featured knitted and crocheted works, such as bonnets with exaggerated elements, showcasing acquired proficiencies in textile manipulation that later influenced her personal style without prior independent commercial output.[26] [27]Career
Entry into Modeling
Ella Emhoff signed with the modeling agency IMG Models on January 28, 2021, one week after the January 20 inauguration of Joe Biden as president and Kamala Harris as vice president, during which Emhoff's appearance in a plaid Miu Miu coat and turtleneck drew widespread online attention.[29][4][30] At the time, Emhoff was a senior studying fashion design at Parsons School of Design, and the agency highlighted her unique look, including her unibrow and glasses, as aligning with their roster of diverse talents like Karlie Kloss and Bella Hadid.[31][32] Her runway debut occurred virtually for Proenza Schouler’s fall 2021 ready-to-wear collection at New York Fashion Week in February 2021, shortly after securing representation.[33][34] This was followed by her first in-person couture runway walk for Balenciaga’s fall/winter 2021-2022 collection during Paris Haute Couture Week on July 7, 2021, where she modeled oversized tailoring under designer Demna Gvasalia.[35][36] Emhoff's early modeling visibility expanded with editorial features and high-profile events, including a September 13, 2021, appearance at the Met Gala, where she wore a custom red Adidas by Stella McCartney ensemble emphasizing comfort and mesh elements.[37][38] Coverage in outlets like Vogue noted her transition from student to professional amid this post-inauguration momentum, with additional bookings such as a Dust Magazine editorial photographed by Collier Schorr in spring/summer 2021.[30][39] Through 2022-2024, Emhoff maintained a presence with recurring New York Fashion Week appearances, including front-row seats and runway walks for brands like Tory Burch, Proenza Schouler, and Coach, alongside continued Balenciaga involvement, though her bookings remained selective and tied to seasonal events rather than consistent major campaigns.[40][41][42] Critics have observed that while initial opportunities accelerated her entry, sustained high-earning longevity in competitive modeling has been limited, with activity centering on event-based visibility over volume bookings.[43]Fashion Design and Artistic Pursuits
Following her graduation from Parsons School of Design in May 2021, Emhoff produced a limited collection of five hand-knitted items, including two sweater vests, a purse, a sleeveless dress, and shorts, priced between $160 and $320, which emphasized her interest in crochet and knit techniques learned during her studies.[44] In March 2021, she collaborated with designer Batsheva Hay on a three-piece knitwear line featuring quirky crochet elements like sweater vests and shorts, which sold out rapidly upon release, reflecting an artisanal, small-batch approach rather than large-scale production.[45] By March 2022, Emhoff launched independent knitwear efforts under her own initiative, focusing on handmade jackets, shorts, and hats produced in limited quantities to maintain a DIY ethos.[46] Emhoff expanded her creative output through targeted collaborations, such as a 2023 partnership with We Are Knitters for a line of knitting kits featuring subdued, wearable designs in neutral tones, available directly via the brand's platform for home crafting.[47] In February 2023, she hosted a pop-up event at Spring Studios in New York City to showcase and sell her hand-knitted pieces, prioritizing community engagement over commercial expansion.[48] These efforts aligned with her establishment of the Soft Hands Knit Club, a platform for sharing knitting patterns and fostering collaborative crafting, as detailed in her Substack posts, including end-of-summer designs released in July 2025.[49] Sales remained confined to pop-ups, direct online offerings, and kit collaborations, with no evidence of major retail distribution or brand licensing through 2025. Transitioning toward fine art, Emhoff debuted a series of "knit paintings"—textile works depicting personal objects like handbags, lockets, and flowers—in June 2024, blending knitting with pictorial representation.[50] Her first solo exhibition, featuring never-before-seen knit portraits, opened in April 2024 at Gotham's gallery space in New York City's East Village, where pieces sold for up to $5,000, underscoring a niche market for her grunge-inflected, handmade textiles amid the local art scene.[51] These works, hosted in unconventional venues like a cannabis dispensary's mezzanine, highlighted her artisanal scale and avoidance of mainstream galleries, with ongoing projects shared via her personal website and social media patterns evoking a Brooklyn-adjacent DIY aesthetic.[52][53]Public Perception
Media Spotlight and Inauguration Attention
Ella Emhoff first garnered widespread media attention during the January 20, 2021, presidential inauguration of Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, her stepmother, where her outfit—a plaid Miu Miu coat paired with a ruffled Batsheva dress—drew viral commentary on social media platforms like Twitter for its quirky, embellished style amid the national broadcast.[54][55] This exposure, tied directly to her family connection to the incoming vice president, positioned her as an instant style focal point, with outlets highlighting how her appearance contrasted conventional inaugural attire.[56] Subsequent profiles in major publications framed Emhoff as the "Second Daughter," emphasizing her personal reflections on navigating family dynamics in the political spotlight rather than any independent achievements. Coverage in Vanity Fair and The New York Times amplified anecdotes about her adjustment to public scrutiny, underscoring the role's demands without linking to policy involvement.[20][43] These pieces, spanning from 2021 through 2024, consistently traced her visibility to her stepmother's position, with interviews focusing on emotional responses to White House life.[57] Following Kamala Harris's loss in the November 5, 2024, presidential election to Donald Trump, Emhoff's media presence shifted to retrospective commentary on her tenure. On January 20, 2025—the date of Trump's inauguration—she posted on Instagram describing her four years as Second Daughter as an "honor" and expressing emotion over the transition out of official family status, a sentiment echoed in profiles by People magazine that centered personal family narratives.[58][59] This coverage, including in The New York Times, continued to highlight anecdotal insights into her experiences, reinforcing the causal tie to transient political prominence without substantive extensions beyond familial proximity.[60][61]