Advertisement
caught the eye as she sat front row at the Vautrait show amid on Monday.
The panellist, 37, cut an edge figure in an oversized beige suit which boasted a voluminous jacket and palazzo pants.
Frankie cinched her tiny waist with a black leather belt from which hung a brown purse that matched her pointed heels perfectly.
The stunner styled her glossy locks into a chic bob and accentuated her dainty features with glam make-up.
Frankie oozed confidence as she posed up a storm ahead of the catwalk presentation as the annual Fashion Week kicked off.
Her appearance comes after the former singer told how she developed an eating disorder in when she felt like her life 'wasn't her own'.
Advertisement
Frankie Bridge caught the eye as she sat front row at the Vautrait show amid Paris Fashion Week on Monday
Frankie was one fifth of the pop group alongside her bandmates , , and .
She struggled with and an eating disorder when the band were at the height of their fame, admitting she 'wouldn't touch a carb, ever'.
Speaking on the Daily Mail's , Frankie said food was something she could control at a time when she felt like she had little in her life.
She explained: 'I had a real strict routine. I lived off drinks that would give me energy. If I was really hungry, I'd have a cereal bar or some chicken.
'I think some of that was to do with how I looked, but it was mostly a control thing. I obviously felt the pressure to look a certain way, being in a girl band, but that came from me.
Advertisement
'It mainly came from, this is the only way I can take any control of my day to day life. Because my anxiety was so bad, I wasn't hungry either.
'I was never aware that I wasn't eating. It wasn't until I'd go into my therapy sessions and my hands would be shaking and she'd be like, you need to eat something.'
The Loose Women panellist, 37, cut an edge figure in an oversized beige suit which boasted a voluminous jacket and palazzo pants
Her appearance comes after the former singer told how she developed an eating disorder in The Saturdays (L-R) Mollie, Una Healy, Rochelle Humes and Vanessa White (pictured in 2009)
- LISTEN: Abi Feltham on addiction and loss on The Life of Bryony
- LISTEN: Dawn O'Porter on The Life of Bryony podcast
- Helen Flanagan: I Needed Someone Good for Me Mentally and Emotionally
- PODCAST The Life of Bryony: Can You Learn To Love Your Body?
- Lottie Tomlinson 'I Never Thought I'd Be Happy Ever Again in My Life'
Frankie also discussed her battle with depression which began shortly after she .
She said: 'The depression started quite near the beginning of The Saturdays. When you first start in a band, you never stop working. Your life becomes not your own.
Advertisement
'I loved it, I have nothing bad to say about being in The Saturdays. You're just kind of waiting to be told everyday what it is you're doing, I never had to think for myself. I think it took its toll.
'I think I felt a loss of control around my life and what was expected of me. I was going through a breakup quite publicly and I think it all just came to a head. Probably burnout, I had an eating disorder around that time.'
Things came to a head before a concert in Ireland when Frankie's bandmate Mollie King walked in on her crying in her hotel room.
She said: 'There was one show we did, I think it was in Ireland, and the minute we got to the hotel, I went in, shut all the lights off, closed the curtains and got straight into bed.
'I think it was Molly who came into my room and she'd never seen me like that before. I couldn't stop crying and was like, "I can't do the show." I managed to but like with her basically holding me up.
'After that, my doctor, they all came to my house and they were like, "you have to go to hospital." It's the only way you'll get the time you need because of my job.
Advertisement
'I organised it all with my agent. It felt like I was keeping a dirty secret, that I was about to go into hospital. The girls didn't know, no one knew.'
Advertisement




