Jessica Simpson, 43, showed off her chest in new Instagram photos shared on Tuesday.
The Dukes Of Hazzard actress posed in a low-cut black top with a black jacket with gold buttons after losing 100 pounds five years ago.
The blonde bombshell looked fit with a tiny waist as she showed off long cherry red nails.
Her blonde was down as she wore gold jewelry and hot pink lipstick while adding oversized black sunglasses.
The star has been making new music in Nashville as she returns to her roots as a singer after making a fortune with her eponymous clothing and accessories company.
Jessica Simpson, 43, showed off her chest in new Instagram photos shared on Tuesday. The Dukes Of Hazzard actress posed in a low-cut black top with a black jacket with gold buttons after losing 100 pounds five years ago.
The blonde bombshell showed off long cherry red nails while wearing gold jewelry and hot pink lipstick.
She is also a busy married mother.
Jessica and Eric married in 2014 and have three children: daughters Maxwell Drew, 11, and Birdie Mae, four, as well as son Ace Knute, 10.
This comes four years after the former reality TV star lost 100 pounds thanks to her intense workouts that included walking 14,000 steps a day after welcoming three children with husband Eric Johnson.
She has said in the past that she weighed up to 240 pounds when she was pregnant.
The former reality star admitted in 2019 that she lost 100 pounds nearly six months after giving birth to her third daughter, Birdie.
She followed a diet plan and walked 14,000 steps a day with the help of celebrity trainer Harley Pasternak, and has since shared gym updates while maintaining her weight loss over the years.
‘6 months. 100 pounds lighter (Yes, I tipped the scale at 240),’ she wrote on Instagram while revealing his weight loss.
‘My first trip outside of #BIRDIEMAE and emotional for many reasons, but very proud to feel like myself again. Even when it seemed impossible, I chose to work harder.”
The star has been making new music in Nashville as she returns to her roots as a singer after making a fortune with her eponymous clothing and accessories company.
harley said MY! News at the time: ‘It had to be more than just regaining the baby weight, but how can I keep what I’m doing now forever?’ That’s why we’re not big fans of extreme diets or radical forms of exercise.”
Simpson told Hoda Kotb during an appearance on the Today is the show in 2021 she never weighs herself again, she doesn’t have a scale and she follows her intuition about how she feels when choosing her clothes.
“I have no idea how much I weigh,” he said. ‘I just want to feel good and be able to zip up my pants. If I don’t have it, I have another size. I have all sizes.’
In September 2022, Simpson said she was happy to “make money” from conversations about her fluctuating weight.
The star acknowledges that her weight has been the subject of speculation for years, and in fact was one of the reasons she decided to launch her own fashion line, The Jessica Simpson Collection.
Jessica and Eric married in 2014 and have three children: daughters Maxwell Drew, 11, and Birdie Mae, 5, as well as son Ace Knute, 10.
The actress featured above in the 2005 film The Dukes Of Hazzard; view to the right for their fall 2023 collection
The singer told Extra: “I decided, ‘OK, everyone is going to talk about my weight all the time, I might as well make money from it and turn it into a business selling clothes and acceptance.'”
By contrast, in 2021, Jessica admitted to feeling hurt by the scrutiny she faced. The blonde beauty felt that there was an intense focus on her appearance and weight when she was younger.
She explained: “There is a wonderful movement now for body positivity and the response to that part of my story has been overwhelmingly supportive.”
The debate over her weight caused Jessica to become distressed about her appearance.
However, since then she learned to love her body. Jessica, who made her film debut as Daisy Duke in ‘The Duke and Duchess of Hazzard’ in 2005, said: ‘I spent many years beating myself up over an unrealistic body standard that made me feel like a failure all the time.
‘I’m still a work in progress when it comes to self-criticism, but I now have the tools to silence those voices in my head when they speak. I believe in my heart that a healthy body and a good mind-body connection are what is truly important and help me accept imperfections as beauty.’