Fearne Cotton delights fans with a rare grown up snap of her mini-me daughter

Fearne Cotton delights fans with a rare grown up snap of her mini-me daughter

Celebs

Fearne Cotton delights fans with a rare grown up snap of her mini-me daughter Honey

Fearne Cotton captured the precious moment of her daughter Honey on camera and shared it with her fans – much to their delight

Fearne Cotton sent her fans wild with an incredibly rare and grown up picture of her daughter Honey.

The mother took a sneaky snap while her daughter wasn’t looking at the camera and shared it on Instagram on Wednesday.

Honey, now four, was peering into the bathroom with her head to the back of the camera.

Her lovely locks were folded into a messy bun and she stood shyly in the corner of the room while she gazed through the door.

Fearne captured the precious moment on camera and shared it with her fans – much to their delight.

She wrote: “Morning messy bun head.”

Many were quick to comment how much taller and how she had grown since the last time they had seen her on social media.

“She looks taller,” one fan wrote, leading the troops.

Others added: “She’s so big now!!!”

“Her hair colour is just beautiful.”

“Beautiful hair colour x.”

“Love the wallpaper and tiles !! Your daughter looks a cutie treasure every moment.”

Fearne also has a son Rex, seven, with her husband Jesse Wood.

Already Jesse had a claim to fame as the son of Rolling Stones legend Ronnie.

But Fearne rocketed to fame at the age of 15 but on reflection she said it had a devastating impact on her leading to an eating disorder.

Recently, the mother-of-two admitted she spiralled into having an eating disorder bulimia when she was surrounded by skinny pop stars.

She told The Mirror: “I was thrust into this weird world. I was a normal kid going to a state school in London and the next minute I was sat next to these tiny, tiny pop stars in a TV studio going, ‘I don’t look like that, I don’t fit in here’.

“I was a teenager with puppy fat, like all teenagers have, and looked very regular and normal. But as perfectly fine as I was, I instantly had that comparison disease, where you sit and look at other people and think, ‘Oh God, I don’t fit in, this is awful’. I felt like that for a long time. I dipped into this world of bulimia from the age of 19.

“Looking back, I disregarded bulimia for a long time and didn’t see it as a mental health illness, I just saw it as a weird thing for me to be doing.”

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