Words matter. These are the best Vogue Williams Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I trained the day before I gave birth and the only reason I didn’t on the day I was giving birth was that I had to be in hospital at 6:30 A. M. to be induced so I wasn’t able to make a spin class.
I don’t model anymore, there’s, like, zero pressure for me to get back into shape.
My anxiety was probably at an all-time high before ‘The Jump.’ I look back at pictures and think: ‘God, I’m really skinny there,’ because when you’re anxious you have that feeling in your stomach and don’t feel like eating.
From the moment we met on ‘The Jump’ we were best friends. We really enjoyed each other’s company and we hung out a lot so I knew that, if nothing else, I had made a friend for life in Spencer.
I was always more street-smart than academic, as such, but I took a Mensa test once and did quite well in it.
I work out a lot at the gym, probably five or six days a week, even when I’m on holiday.
I’m trying to figure out where I’m going with my life and that causes a lot of anxiety.
I think I just wanted to run after my dad died, so I ran to Australia. It’s only looking back that I think that, though. I never would have done anything like that before; it was so out of character.
I used to have a bright pink, shiny bubble jacket when I was young. My mum made me wear it.
A whole day without make-up is a lovely feeling.
If I’m not working, I usually wear my gym gear and a fresh face.
I would love a radio show, a bit like when Nicky Byrne sat in for Ryan Tubridy.
I couldn’t leave the house without lip balm.
Regardless of if I’m a size 6 or 26 it’s nobody’s business and nobody has the right to body shame me or anyone else.
When you’re growing up you’re less happy with your body and the way you look but as I’ve got older it’s not the number one priority anymore.
Instagram to me is just all about fun.
I get quite bad anxiety and it’s come back a bit while I’ve been pregnant. I don’t know why I have it – it’s just general life anxiety.
I’ve met people that I’ve seen on Instagram and thought ‘Oh my God! You don’t look like the person I follow on Instagram.’ It’s important to remember it’s a snapshot of someone’s life.
I think with my book, I wanted to first of all just be completely involved in it. I wanted to write it; I didn’t want a ghost writer. I wanted to be honest about everything.
We put each other’s happiness before our own, so I would prefer that Spencer was super happy… So, like I always want him to be happy and he always wants me to be happy, which in turn, makes a very happy house.
I’d love to have legs like supermodel Gisele Bundchen!
I used to consider changing a lot of different things in my appearance. I’ve been that person.
As women, we put a lot of pressure on ourselves, because everyone is different and you’re never going to be someone else.
As a mum, the last thing you need is to be parent-shamed.
When you’re first pregnant, you have that ‘Wow, I can’t wait’ and then, by the end of the nine months – which is really 10 months of waiting for someone to arrive – you’re just so ready for it to be over.
Nobody knows it, but I would be considered posh in Ireland.
I can’t do without real food and I love chocolate.
Taming Spencer wasn’t anything to do with me. He had already grown up and was ready for a relationship. Ready for this kind of relationship.
Sometimes you just have to write some days off, and I know that’s a terrible thing to say, but it’s the truth.
I went on a whole new skincare regime that included two cleansers, two moisturisers, three serums and face pads with glycolic acid in them.
I like women who don’t wear too much make-up. Natalie Portman is naturally stunning, and so are Charlize Theron and Kate Bosworth.
I want a family and I just want us to be happy, which I’m sure we will be.
That’s the joy of having a dog. You have to walk them no matter how awful you feel.
Make-up wise Charlotte Tilbury, Estee Lauder, and Bobbi Brown are my favourites.
The most challenging part of my life is probably my anxiety, to be honest. I have to try to keep it under control and to make sure I feel alright.
I’ve worked every job under the sun, from waitressing in my teens, to clocking hours on a construction site in London (I have degrees in quantity surveying and construction). I modelled on the side and starred on reality TV in Ireland.
I know wearing a bikini is a thing a lot of women dread, but I keep up my training regime whether it’s winter or summer, so my body always stays the same.
The Internet used to be fun, it was nice, now it’s a way for people to be abusive towards one another.
Diane Kruger has a really chilled-out sense of style. It has a Parisian feel and isn’t overly girly.
Spencer is nearly as much of a neat freak as me!
I love a really, good in-depth facial, I’ve had the vampire facial. But I have my limits.
I don’t expect people to think anything nice of me.
One of my friends is single and he hates being single and I’m like, you need to figure out how to be happy on your own before you can actually be with someone else. They bring extra happiness, they don’t bring the happiness.
I do think social media can be positive – there are so many parents online sharing their experiences. I talk to other parents and I’ve made some brilliant friends. But it can also be nasty.
I have two pairs of Louboutins, in black and nude, which go with absolutely everything. They were very expensive, but I love them and I wear them all the time.
I believe in everything in moderation but I try to be careful about what I eat.
I won’t be made to feel guilty about being a working mum; it’s my choice, and I know I’m doing a good job.
You will never see me on the bike or treadmill for long periods of time; I just use them for one-minute sprints between sets.
London seems like such a small place now that I’ve been there for a while.
I worried because I’d been on the pill for so long and the doctor said to me, ‘If you want to have three or four children the chances are you probably won’t get pregnant for another year so you should probably start trying now.’ We started trying and it happened quite quickly.
For me I went to two different skin clinics, I went to the London Skin and Hair Clinic in Holborn first. They gave me quite a few peels over a few months and then put me on a prescribed antibiotic as my skin had got so bad.
I try to be very honest with everything I do.
Sometimes I’ll just feel like wearing all black and being really chill, some days I like dressing boyish and then other days I wanna get really dressed up and be girlie. My wardrobe is all over the place.
I’m a tan addict.
Everyone looks and feels better when they have a tan.
I did have the odd person recognise me, but Australia is massive. I did ‘Dancing With The Stars’ and the odd thing for magazines, but that’s about it.
I used to get comments off people saying, ‘I think it’s a disgrace, you need to be relaxing, you’re pregnant, you need to take the next 10 months off!’ But that doesn’t suit me or my lifestyle or the way I feel about myself. I train a lot for anxiety, it makes me feel good and I like it.
The great thing about the beach they use in ‘Home & Away’ is that they can’t kick you off it, so there were always tons of Irish people on it all the time.
My theory is that if you have pizza one night, you can just make a better choice the the next day.
I’ve used fake tan since my teens. I remember walking into school at 14 with orange hands!