By Ritu Prasad, BBC News
Politicians in pearls, the colour purple and warm woollen mittens - these are just a few of Washington's favourite things from the 2021 Inauguration.
With America's leaders in the spotlight on the inauguration - and world - stage, sometimes what they wear can say more than their speeches.
DC-based fashion consultant Lauren Rothman says Americans have always taken an interest in what political leaders don for inaugural celebrations. And in 2021, with an ongoing pandemic and economic crisis as well as the swearing-in of the first female vice-president, things feel "even more loaded".
It's all about optics for the politically fashion-minded, says Ms Rothman, who helps style politicians for events including inaugurations past.
So let's see how outspoken this year's inauguration crowd really was, from the Bidens to Bernie Sanders - with a little help from some real fashion experts.
Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff
Vice-President Kamala Harris' purple ensemble has already made an impact.
"Symbolically, it's a bipartisan colour because it marries [Republican] red and [Democratic] blue," says Ms Rothman, noting a number of elected officials or spouses had opted for purple today.
But that's not the only reason purple has a special place for US women in politics. The suffragettes often wore the colour in the 1900s while campaigning for women's right to vote.
Professor Elka Stevens, coordinator of the fashion design programme at Howard University, also notes it's a colour of significance in the black community - one tied to the Christian experience as well. Ms Harris' pearl necklace also made reference to a tradition in her Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, the oldest all-black sorority in the US.
Add it all up and Ms Harris' choice of pearls and a purple sharp-cut Christopher John Rogers coat was "an excellent first building block on what the legacy is of how to look like a woman in power", Ms Rothman says.
Both Mrs Biden and Ms Harris also took care to choose emerging US brands for their inaugural looks. Ms Harris' outfit, from head-to-toe, showed off African-American designers.
And we can't forget Doug Emhoff either, America's "first second gentleman".
"He chose to do everything that he should, which is to not distract and perfectly fit in," says Rothman.
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