Roxy Jacenko showed off her extravagant $15,000 Christmas decorations as she got into the holiday spirit this week.
The PR mogul, 44, took to Instagram on Tuesday to show her fans the high-end custom fairy lights she had installed outside her luxurious Singapore mansion.
Roxy, who splits her time between Sydney and Singapore after moving with her husband Oliver Curtis last year, has lined the entire front of her house with twinkling fairy lights from floor to ceiling.
The exterior of their sprawling home on Sentosa Island was fully illuminated by the 11-metre custom curtain lights, while adding a luxurious touch to the property for the festive period.
She hired Australian lighting company Mr & Mrs Hill to install the extravagant decorations, as she spared no expense on her festive lighting this year.
‘There is nothing extra about me. @mrandmrshill_ and we’re done installing this year’s Christmas lights,” Roxy wrote in a caption.
Roxy Jacenko showed off her extravagant $15,000 Christmas decorations as she got into the holiday spirit this week.
The public relations mogul, 44, took to Instagram on Tuesday to show her fans the custom fairy lights she installed outside her luxurious Singapore mansion.
Roxy’s mansion is located in Sentosa Cove, often known as ‘Millionaires’ Row’ and features a variety of luxury properties, many of which are valued at over $25 million.
The holiday lighting of their mansion marks Mr. and Mrs. Hill’s first international installation, and they worked with a local electrical company to help make Roxy’s dream a reality.
Speaking to Daily Mail Australia, co-founder Cassandra Hill revealed that the light installation was valued at a staggering $15,000 and took two full days to install, a mammoth task.
“The Roxy Christmas installation was a special project for us, marking our first international installation and a coming full circle moment as Roxy was our first Christmas lighting customer four years ago,” he said.
‘For this project, we worked remotely from Australia to design the concept. Roxy shared images and basic measurements of her home and we developed a custom lighting design.
‘Once completed, we shipped the products to Singapore and a local electrical team carried out the installation under our direction.
‘The centerpiece of the display is the 11-metre custom light curtains, which required a crane to anchor them.
“The entire installation took two days to complete, with delays due to the wet weather that characterizes Singapore at this time of year.”
The exterior of their sprawling home on Sentosa Island was fully illuminated by 11-metre custom curtain lights, while adding a luxurious touch to the property for the festive period.
Their festive lighting at the mansion marks the first international installation by Australian lighting firm Mr & Mrs Hill and they worked with a local electrical company to help realize Roxy’s dream.
Speaking to Daily Mail Australia, co-founder Cassandra Hill revealed that the light installation was valued at a staggering $15,000 and took two full days to install, a mammoth task.
Roxy and Oliver moved to Singapore with their two children, daughter Pixie, 13, and son Hunter, 10, from Sydney last year.
At the time, the businesswoman admitted that she found it “refreshing” that no one knew who she was in Singapore and embraced anonymity.
“No one knows me there, no one has a preconceived idea of who or what I am, no one has expectations, and best of all, no one cares!” She told the Sydney Morning Herald about the move at the time.
‘In Singapore it was a question of “Roxy who?” In fact, I found it really refreshing and a little liberating.”
They decided to move after Oliver got a job in the countryside, and then Roxy closed some of her businesses to join him there.
However, she has since returned to Sydney and relaunched Sweaty Betty PR, two years after stepping down as director.
Confirming her return to advertising in September, Roxy revealed she wasn’t born to be a “housewife” and finds it much “easier” to run six businesses.
“I’ve always worked, I don’t know anything different, so going back to it was inevitable,” he told Daily Mail Australia.
Roxy and her husband Oliver Curtis moved to Singapore with their two children, daughter Pixie, 13, and son Hunter, 10, from Sydney last year.
However, she has since returned to Sydney because she wasn’t born to be a “housewife” and finds it much “easier” to run six businesses. She appears in the photo with Pixie and Hunter.
‘I tried to quit, but I was bored! I’m an entrepreneur, it’s in my blood, so staying home and playing tennis and eating for a long time was never going to last.
‘I travel back to Sydney twice a month. Being 7 hours away and only a 3 hour time difference is very easy for me and also very nice to spend time with my mother Doreen and my friends, as well as being in an office environment again.’
Roxy went on to say that even when she retired from being a PR representative, she was still running her digital agency The Ministry of Talent.
‘(I) look after some of the best digital influencers in the country, but at 2pm my day ends. “My friends and I joke that I do in a couple of hours what many would do in a day, so going back to PR means I’ll be challenged again and working 24/7,” she added.
‘I’m in a hurry to do it. It’s not for everyone but it works for me…it’s rewarding! Suppose it’s like my hobby!’
She said she praises the stay-at-home moms because they did it for six months and “damn, that would have to be the hardest job.”
‘There is nothing to do here (in Singapore), nothing. Being a housewife is not for me. Let’s be realistic. “I’ve bought to the point where I can’t buy any more,” he told The Sunday Telegraph.
‘Yes, the Ministry of Talent is moving forward and I work on it every day, but it is not enough.
“I still have too much time in the day and there are a limited number of hours when Chanel, Louis Vuitton and Prada are open.”