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
believe death diabetic eventually stops taking
To me, it is like a diabetic with insulin. If that diabetic stops taking insulin, they will die, and I believe that if I don't follow the 12-step programme, I will regress, and that could eventually be the death of me.
good work
I'm not good at cutting off from work.
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.
balance learn spend sure time
I'm having to learn to get the balance right, because if you want a full-time career, and you also want to be a mother who is there for your child, then you have to make sure that when you do spend time together, you're really there for them.
It's very exciting to feel like a different woman with a new identity.
energy kids older run slightly younger
I want to feel I have the energy I will need as an older mother having a younger baby. It's really important that when I'm 51, and my daughter is 10, that I feel I can still run around and do things with her, and feel the energy of a slightly younger woman having their kids at school.
We all know what we don't like about our bodies.
To me, a yummy mummy is a mum in her twenties, like Donna Air.
Even my basic, basic wardrobe is still pathetically colour coordinated. It just is. That is just me.
nine
I've been nine stone for 20 years. I always eat what I want; it's not an issue for me.
bum
I've a big bum and chunky calves. My husband says I've got elephantiasis of the legs.
age companies perhaps tv women
Perhaps British TV companies don't want women my age on screen. I don't know.
home
I grew up in a very normal home.
stories
I don't have a problem with the stories saying I'm skinny at all.