Victoria Beckham looked adorable in throwback childhood snaps as she wished her lookalike sister Louise Adams a happy birthday on Thursday.
The fashion designer, 50, shared a slew of adorable photos to celebrate the occasion, with she and her younger sister wearing a series of matching outfits.
In one photo, the siblings donned matching gingham pastel dresses and were clutching onto teddies as they stood side by side for the childhood photo.
Alongside the sweet picture shared with her 32.9 million Instagram followers, Victoria penned: ‘Happy birthday @louisesadams. I love you!’
A second throwback snap saw the sisters again in matching ensembles as they smiled in front of a huge vanity mirror and dressing table.
This time, the youngsters were wearing frilly blue pyjamas as they grinned for the photo.
Victoria Beckham looked adorable in throwback childhood snaps as she wished her lookalike sister Louise Adams a happy birthday on Thursday
The fashion designer, 50, shared a slew of adorable photos to celebrate the occasion, with she and her younger sister wearing a series of matching outfits
Victoria joked: ‘We were so cute… what happened?!?,’ alongside laughing emojis, before she wished her a happy birthday again.
Finally, the WAG shared a snap of herself and Louise sitting on the bonnett of her dad’s old Rolls-Royce wearing cute pink dresses.
She wrote: ‘Here it is!! Love u @louisesadams @jackie.adams_,’ tagging her sister and mother in the story.
Victoria is the eldest of the three siblings, born to to parents Jacqueline and Anthony Adams.
Louise shares four children, Liberty, Tallulah, Finlay and Quincy with her ex-husband Darren Flood.
Last year, Victoria debuted her own brand £110 ‘My Dad Had A Rolls Royce’ T-shirt on Instagram, which was inspired by a viral moment in the Beckham documentary.
The star posted a photo of herself in the white shirt to her Story and wrote ‘available now’ with a link to her website.
She followed the snap with the famous Beckham documentary clip of Victoria claiming her family were ‘very working, working class’.
Finally, the WAG shared a snap of herself and Louise sitting on the bonnett of her dad’s old Rolls-Royce wearing cute pink dresses
Pictured: Victoria and Louise at the fashion designer’s 50th birthday bash in April
Victoria debuted her £110 ‘My Dad Had A Rolls Royce’ T-shirt on Instagram last year, which was inspired by THAT viral moment in the Beckham documentary
David interrupted, incredulous, and asked Victoria to be honest.
She replied: ‘I am!’ He then repeatedly asked Victoria to reveal what car her dad used to drive her to school in.
The Spice Girl eventually gave in and said: ‘OK. In the ’80s, my dad had a Rolls-Royce.’
‘Thank you.’ David replied, and immediately left and closed the door behind him, his job done.
Victoria has since revealed in a new interview with Harper’s Bazaar magazine that the scene was completely candid, explaining: ‘David was in the other room watching the monitor, and then he put his head in the door.’
‘It was not rehearsed. Like the dancing in the tent. None of it was rehearsed.’
As well as Victoria capitalizing on the moment with her £110 T-shirt, the couple also spoofed the scene in a Super Bowl advert debut for Uber Eats.
According to Netflix’s own data, Beckham was the most-watched show for two weeks when it was released, with 11,600,000 fans watching globally.
The famous Beckham documentary clip saw Victoria claim her family were ‘very working, working class’
Elsewhere in her Harper’s Bazaar interview Victoria admitted she no longer cares about being a celebrity after turning 50 as she passes the baton to her daughter Harper.
The fashion designer discussed how she has nativated being in the public eye since she soared to stardom as part of the Spice Girls in the nineties.
The mother of four admitted it ‘used to be fun’ getting dressed up and being snapped by the paparazzi in a stylish outfit, however she admitted she no longer cares for it.
Speaking about protecting her privacy, she said: ‘You have to go through those times to make you, ultimately, who you are. We’ve kind of figured out how to be quite discreet, which is just how we want to conduct our lives right now.
‘I suppose it used to be fun to go out and be chased by paparazzi walking down Bond Street – and you would dress knowing you were going to get that. I don’t want that any more.’
‘I’ve been doing this too long. I suppose I did when I was growing up but, nowadays, there’s just too much going on; too busy; too many kids to worry about. I woke up at 50, and I gave a s*** less.’