Melania Trump may be one of the most recognizable names on the planet — a model, a First Lady, and the wife of business tycoon and president Donald Trump.
But when it comes to her personal life, she plays things very close to the chest.
Unlike many public figures, Melania has often chosen privacy over attention.
That quiet lifestyle extends to her son Barron — and perhaps most intriguingly, to her older sister, Ines Knauss. While Melania has been in the global spotlight for decades, Ines has remained virtually unseen — but she may be the closest person in Melania’s world.
What few people realize is just how deep the sisters’ bond runs.
Small-town roots and a stylish start
Melania and Ines were both born in Novo Mesto, Slovenia, and raised in the quiet railway town of Sevnica. Their father, Viktor, worked as a car mechanic and chauffeur, while their mother, Amalija, was a pattern-maker at a clothing factory.
“I grew up with a beautiful family and had a wonderful childhood,” Melania once said. “My mother and father taught us the importance of education, hard work and family.”

Their parents worked hard but made time to give their daughters a worldly upbringing. They took the girls on vacations to France, Italy, and Germany — and even today, the family still owns a home in Slovenia that they return to a few times a year.
Fashion was always in the background. Amalija often designed and sewed clothes for her daughters, helping them look polished from a young age. As Melania grew older, she even started designing some of her own outfits.
“She was very pretty,” said Tomšič, a local hospital administrator in Sevnica. “She was always very fancy.” (Melania donated $25,000 to the hospital after marrying Donald Trump.)
The model and the designer
At just 16, Melania was discovered by fashion photographer Stane Jerko. He spotted her by chance after a fashion show in Ljubljana.
“By the staircase at the entrance, I saw this girl,” Jerko recalled. “She was tall, slim, with long hair. I told her who I was, what I did, and why I would photograph her.”
In 1992, Ines Knauss began her studies at the Academy of Fine Arts at Edward Kardelj University in Ljubljana.
Around this time, Melania credits her sister with giving her a life-changing piece of advice.
“Ines… told me about a Slovenian modeling competition called the ‘Look of the Year,’ hosted by Jana magazine. The winner would earn a contract with Metropolitan Model Agency, a respected Paris-based agency.
‘Ines encouraged me to send in my photos. ‘No one looks like you,’ she said.”
A year later, Melania left the University of Ljubljana to pursue modeling full-time. She signed with a modeling agency in Milan and quickly began building her career — without any of the party-girl drama that might come with that world.

“She kept to herself, she was a loner,” Jerko said. “After a shoot or a catwalk, she went home, not out. She didn’t want to waste time partying.”
Ines wasn’t far behind. While Melania was in front of the camera, Ines was behind the scenes, hoping to break into the fashion world as a designer.
“She really wanted to be in fashion but didn’t know how to break in,” said Paris-based photographer Ale de Basseville. “Ines wasn’t like the other girls you would meet there, who behave like queens. She was really polite and very mellow.”
From Milan to Manhattan
When Melania met Italian businessman Paolo Zampolli, he offered to help her get a U.S. work visa. Naturally, Ines came along for the journey to New York.
It was 1998 when everything changed. During Fashion Week, Melania attended a Kit Kat Club event. Zampolli introduced her to his friend — real estate mogul Donald Trump. But Melania was unimpressed by his flashy entrance.
He was with a date at the time and asked for Melania’s number, but she refused.
“Melania said, ‘He’s here with a woman. I am absolutely not giving him my number,’” friend Edit Molnar told the New York Post. “She wouldn’t even consider it. Donald did all the work.”
Melania herself confirmed that story to Tatler. “He wanted my number,” she said. “But he was on a date, so of course I didn’t give it to him. I said, ‘I am not giving you my number; give me yours and I will call you.’ If I give him my number, I’m just one of the women he calls.”
The move worked — and the rest, as they say, is history.
Quiet role in Melania’s life
Over the years, Melania has fiercely guarded her privacy. But one name that quietly remains close is Ines.
According to People, Ines was Melania’s maid of honor when she married Donald Trump. The sisters remain incredibly close, even if Ines chooses to stay out of the public eye and has maintained an ultra-private lifestyle.
She reportedly lives just four blocks from Melania’s penthouse in Trump Tower, in a Trump-owned building that once housed Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner. Even though her life remains low-key — she’s never far from her sister’s side.
Audrey Gruss, a Palm Beach philanthropist who met Ines at a 2005 Mar-a-Lago fundraiser, remembered her as “a lovely person, and extremely creative.”
In fact, Melania has occasionally shared her sister’s artwork online. Ines appears to be an illustrator — and someone Melania has leaned on through the most pivotal moments of her life.
When Melania gave birth
When Melania gave birth to Barron, it wasn’t staff she turned to most — it was Ines.
“Melania had all the professional help she needed at that point,” said Milan-based fashion designer Luisa Beccaria. “But it was her sister she trusted.”
Though she avoids the cameras, Ines Knauss has been a quiet force behind one of the world’s most photographed women.
She may not attend state dinners or speak at rallies, but her presence is felt — as Melania’s closest confidante, her creative collaborator, and her lifelong friend.
Their bond is a reminder that behind every public figure is a private story — and often, a sister who’s been there since the very beginning.