Trinny Woodall

Trinny Woodall
TrinnyWoodall is a British fashion and make-over advisor, designer, television presenter and author. She was privately educated. After ten years working in marketing – Woodall met Susannah Constantine in 1994, whom she joined to write a weekly fashion column for The Daily Telegraph. This led to the launch of their own internet fashion-advice business and the release of their first fashion-advice book...
NationalityEnglish
ProfessionDesigner
Date of Birth8 February 1964
botox half move
I judge when I need a top-up of Botox by looking in the mirror to see if I can move more than half my forehead.
best diet wear
If you want to make the best of yourself, you don't necessarily need to diet - you need to wear the right stuff.
needs
The idea of what a feminist is has changed so much that there needs to be a new word for it.
good
I'd never have a facelift, as I have never seen one that looks good.
baby strong strong-faith
I had a strong faith that I would, eventually, have a baby.
fashion hate trends
I hate trends, but I love fashion.
sometimes shops knickers
I literally change on the shop floor. I just stand there in my knickers sometimes.
children self careers
Careers, children and homemaking all come above preserving your appearance. Self-preservation is at the bottom of the scale.
A marriage can go wrong at any time.
new-york godmother three
The first time I was given money to shop for myself, I was 13 and staying with my godmother in New York. I went to Clinique and bought the three-step acne programme and felt so grown-up.
girl jealous past
I look at younger girls and I think, 'Doesn't she look great? Isn't she pretty?' And while I know I'll never be there again, I'm past the age of feeling jealous. Maybe in my 30s I would have been, but that part of my life has gone.
want stuff needs
If you want to make the best of yourself you don't necessarily need to diet - you need to wear the right stuff.
thinking self-worth clothes
As for the people who say tackling problems through clothes is superficial, I think they say that because they have their own issues about self worth.
size shapes forget-you
The mantra is forget your size discover your shape and transform yourself.