What do the mouth parts of clothes moths look like?

I couldn’t believe that in this age of Scanning Electron Microphotographs and Google Image searches that I wouldn’t be able to find an image of the mouth parts of the adult common clothes moth. But I have had no luck. All I can find are photos of nectar-drinking moth mouth parts, and the extremely unhelpful note: “The adults are unable to feed, having greatly reduced mouth parts” etc.

WHAT do these “greatly reduced mouth parts” look like?

Nobody? No entomologists? Or middle-school biology teachers?