Kourtney Kardashian has looked sensational opposite her sister Kim in the new SKIMS x DG ads which debuted this week.
The 45-year-old reality TV siren was seen in a black see-through camisole and skimpy undies with thigh high stockings in a new image shared to Instagram on Wednesday.
The wife of Travis Barker was also spotted in a skintight black dress.
Skims followers admired her post baby body after welcoming son Rocky months ago. ‘It’s giving Kourtney is ready for the big screen! She looks like a movie star! ❤️’ shared one fan on social media.
Kourtney used to weigh 95lbs when fame first hit, but then went up to 105lbs. She has said in the past that she normally gains about 40lbs when pregnant so she was probably 145lbs to 150lbs before giving birth.
The star – who is about 5ft1in – has clearly lost almost all of her Rocky baby weight, as the photos illustrate, and is hovering around 110lbs and is a size 2.
Kourtney and Travis welcomed Rocky Thirteen Barker over a year ago on November 1, 2023.
They are committed to keeping their son Rocky ‘out of the spotlight’.
The Blink-182 drummer, 48, and the Poosh founder, 45, are doing everything in their power to keep their baby’s life private.
But it’s not easy given they are in one of the most famous families on the planet.
In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Travis said: ‘Unfortunately, someone finally got a photo of him, but we’d rather keep him out of the spotlight.’
The rock star admits he wishes he kept his older children – son Landon, 20, and daughter Alabama, 18 – out of the spotlight.
Travis – who is also a stepfather to Atiana De La Hoya, 25, whose mom is his ex-wife Shanna Moakler, 49, as well as Kourtney and Scott Disick’s children Penelope, 12, Reign, nine, and Mason, 14 – added: ‘If I could do everything different, I would have done the same thing with my [older] kids.
‘I think it’s weird to grow up and you’re 15 or 12, and you’re like, ‘Mom, you posted this of me?”
The ‘Feeling This’ hitmaker also spoke about his special musical bond with his musician son Landon.
He said: ‘When I was growing up, I was into the Beastie Boys, Slayer, King Diamond and Minor Threat while my dad was listening to Johnny Cash, Buck Owens and Willie Nelson.
‘At the time it was hard, having different musical tastes. But my son and I have had the same musical taste all our lives.’
He continued: ‘It’s the coolest relationship.
‘Landon is home, most of the time, creating music by himself. But when I’m home, he asks me to do a few days in the studio or help finish a song, or listen to them, and I help him however I can.’
Asked what advice he has passed down to his son, he replied: ‘If you want to be great, you’ve got to spend countless days in the studio.
You’ve got to make so much music before you make the music that you want to put out and give to the world.’