2024 election

Everything to Know About Ella Emhoff

Mansur Gavriel 10 Year Anniversary
Photo: Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Mansur Gavriel

When her stepmother Kamala Harris was sworn in as vice-president in 2021, Ella Emhoff was swiftly dubbed the First Daughter of Bushwick — a nod to her penchant for dressing like a liberal-arts-kid meme and the fact that she was at the time studying fashion at Parsons. Since then, she’s graduated, cemented her spot on the front lines of Fashion Week, and become a rising alt-fashion star who happens to visit the White House every so often. During Harris’s run for president, Emhoff has played a supportive role in her stepmother’s campaign, which has included defending Harris against conservatives who ridicule her alleged “childlessness.” In August, Emhoff brought a parade of characteristically crafty outfits to the DNC — an off-white Helmut Lang tank to round off her Harris-Walz hat, a Puppets and Puppets cookie purse to stash her disposable cameras — and took the stage on the last night in a Joe Ando drop-waist gown to talk about how Harris cared for her as a tween.

Emhoff’s presence in Chicago also hit a nerve for conservatives, and not just because some of them have lost their minds over the fact Harris doesn’t have biological children. Her art-school-graduate-meets-Washington vibe has sent some people into a real tizzy — one panicked commentator took one look at her curly mullet and cow tattoos and concluded that she was “pretty much the nightmare scenario for most people with a daughter. ”

For those more concerned about, I don’t know, their daughters’ reproductive rights and bodily autonomy, it’s just as fun to see Emhoff step into Harris’s campaign as it is to see her on the runway. Here’s what to know about the fashion world’s favorite political family member.

She grew up in L.A. and met Kamala when she was 14.

Ella grew up in L.A., the daughter of entertainment lawyer Doug Emhoff and film producer Kerstin Emhoff. Her parents got divorced in 2008 when Ella was 9. She and her older brother, Cole, told the New York Times that the period after their parents got divorced involved Doug living in an apartment complex called the Palazzo and relying on Craigslist to get the kids homemade meals from strangers, since he didn’t know how to cook yet. Luckily for all, this time was “really bonding.”

Also lucky: Kamala and her ease in the kitchen entered the picture about five years later. Doug and Kamala were set up on a blind date in 2012, and Ella has talked glowingly about her stepmother’s entry into the family — even for her preteen self. “Kamala came into my life when I was 14,” she said during her DNC speech, “famously a very easy time for a teenager. Like a lot of young people, I didn’t always understand what I was feeling, but no matter what, Kamala was always there for me. She was patient, caring, and always took me seriously.” Both kids recall being keyed into local politics and warning any friends who came over for dinner that they would be grilled about their ten-year plans.

Also, they are one of those houses that call their dad by his first name, but only because, they say, like the word “Dad,” Doug is one syllable and begins with “D.” Kerstin is Mom.

Though her father, Doug, has become the Biden administration’s — and the Harris-Walz’s campaign’s — leading voice on American Judaism and fighting antisemitism, Ella has been careful to publicly set herself apart. Responding to a sudden surge of interest from Jewish publications following Biden’s inauguration, a spokesperson told the press in 2021 that Ella is “not Jewish” because it’s “not something she grew up with.”

She’s a fashion mainstay.

After graduating high school in 2017, Ella decamped to New York to study fine arts at Parsons with a focus in apparel and textiles. (And yes, she really did live in Bushwick. She may still live there, but the Secret Service doesn’t want us to know that.) From the second she hit the Capitol steps in a bejeweled Miu Miu top coat, she’s been the most fashionable figure in politics — or, depending on how you look at it, the most politically connected woman in fashion. Barely a week after Biden’s inauguration, she signed with IMG Models; before long, she was popping up on Proenza Schouler’s and Balenciaga’s runways. By the time Biden’s first 100 days were up, Ella and her Secret Service detail were pretty much guaranteed front-row seats at Fashion Week.

At the 2021 Met Gala. Photo: Taylor Hill/WireImage
Arriving at Thom Browne during NYFW 2023. Photo: Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Though Emhoff has cited everything from vintage JCPenney to school uniforms as her fashion influences, some considerations are more practical — her brother Cole told the Times that after Kerstin found out about one of her arm tattoos on Instagram, she “banks on wearing long sleeves when she needs to.”

Sometime around the inauguration, Ella started dating GQ writer Sam Hine — a menswear boyfriend to go with all those Thom Browne kilts. They made a bunch of stylish appearances together at fashion week after-parties and even the Grand Prix. Hine and Emhoff have not been seen together in a while, and he seems to have disappeared from her Instagram feed, though neither of them has said anything publicly.

Posing at her 2023 pop-up, “Ella Emhoff Likes to Knit.” Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for IMG Fashion

She knits … hard.

If you haven’t noticed from her wide collection of yarn-based accessories, Emhoff is a big crafter. Much of her Instagram account is devoted to her crocheted art — she’s rendered cartoon animals, real dogs, wildlife, herself, and other bits of her sometimes-sponsored life via needle and yarn. She also showed a collection of knit paintings at Gotham, a concept-store-slash-dispensary, in April, where some of her knit clothing was also for sale. She recently used some comically large yarn to crochet a basket for her dog, Jerry:

Joe Ando, the designer who made Emhoff’s DNC dress, said in another post that she crocheted the rosette on the arm of the dress herself, because of course she did.

It’s not all so cutesy, though — Ella, who’s been knitting since she was 6 and learned to use a knitting machine while at Parsons, once told the Cut she has “full-on tendonitis” from all that needling, and has a level of muscle deterioration her doctor likened to “really old people.” Beauty is pain!

Last fall, Emhoff also launched a knitting club, Soft Hands, which traveled around various trendy New York locations. She gave ticket-buyers a knitting 101 and let them gab, socialize, and swap tips. After a hiatus, the club recently returned in digital — and expanded — form. Emhoff turned it into a Substack dedicated to all things craft, where she announced that she’ll be filming video tutorials and putting together guides and lists about everything from knitting and pottery to mending and general DIY-ing for her subscribers. (There will also be a free version with less content.) It seems like a great place to learn more about Ella and also channel all your election anxiety into crocheting a cardigan.

This post has been updated.

Everything to Know About Ella Emhoff