Molly-Mae Hague gave a rare insight in to her life with daughter Bambi as she dished out advice to Vogue fans.
The influencer, 25, was acting as the fashion magazine’s Agony Aunt for an Instagram video on Sunday and was giving out helpful advice to worried readers.
In the video, the former Love Island star answered questions including how to handle neighbours having loud sex and falling in love with your co-worker.
And she also gave her fans an insight into her skills in the kitchen, joking she wasn’t a chef but tried her best.
Speaking to the camera on a patterned sofa, the star advised frustrated neighbours to bang on their walls if people are having sex too loudly.
Molly-Mae Hague, 25, gave a rare insight in to her life with daughter Bambi as she dished out advice to Vogue fans on Instagram on Sunday
The influencer was acting as the fashion magazine’s Agony Aunt for an Instagram video and was giving out helpful advice to worried readers on topics including loud sex and pasta portions
When one person asked for advice in the kitchen, and specifically how to cook the right amount of pasta Molly was also on hand.
The blond beauty advised viewers: ‘Well I’m no chef. I’m definitely no Nigella Lawson, so I would probably just say eyeball it.
‘But 100 grams of pasta dry is very different to 100 grams cooked, isn’t it? It’s very confusing and I’m no chef so just eyeball it, just wing it.’
Another Vogue fan asked the star what they should do if they don’t like their best friend’s partner.
Molly said: ‘That’s a very tricky one’ before advising them to ‘just have a really honest conversation with them and tell them why.’
Molly also advised readers to always ask their colleague out if they’re attracted to them because ‘you only get one life so just go for it’.
In the video Molly channeled old school glamour in a black monochrome outfit.
She donned a a pair of wide leg black tailored trousers and a cosy knitted cardigan, and she styled her hair in a 1940s-inspired blow out before finishing off her ensemble with soft make-up.
Molly-Mae shares her daughter Bambi, 22 months, with her former fiancée Tommy Fury but the pair separated in August (pictured together)
One person asked for advice in the kitchen, and specifically how to cook the right amount of pasta and Molly joked that she was no Nigella Lawson
Molly’s advice to fans comes after she emotionally admitted she felt like ‘her life was over’ after giving birth as she detailed a recent ‘healing’ experience on her latest YouTube vlog.
The reality star-turned-business mogul, who broke up with ex-fiancé and boxer Tommy Fury in August, got candid about the joy and sorrow of giving birth to her daughter Bambi, 22 months.
Explaining how she recently went to visit her manager Francesca Britton’s newborn baby, she said: ‘This afternoon we visited Fran’s new baby, he’s called Tate and it was so surreal because she was in the same room that I was in with Bambi.
‘It was so surreal. It was so magical.
‘I was helping swaddle him and change his nappy, he weed all over me.’
The former reality star went into more detail, adding: ‘To go back to that room was really surreal, I had a lot of incredible highs in that room and a lot of really low lows.
Molly’s advice to fans comes after she emotionally admitted she felt like ‘her life was over’ after giving birth as she detailed a recent ‘healing’ experience on her latest YouTube vlog
The reality star-turned-business mogul got candid about the joy and sorrow of giving birth to little Bambi, one, in the recent clip
‘I remember when my milk came in when I was taking a shower in that room, the way I cried in the shower in that room, I’ve never ever in my life cried like that before.
Admitting it inevitably felt ‘strange’ to return to the same room nearly two years later, she continued: ‘I literally felt like my life was over even though I’d just given birth, it was very strange.
‘And that all happened in that room, so to go back in there today to see her baby boy and to share that special moment with her, it felt a bit healing, in a weird way.
‘It felt like I’d healed a little part of me.’