Princess and Emily Andre enjoyed a girls’ trip to Winter Wonderland in London on Wednesday.
The 17-year-old joined her step mother at the VIP launch of the annual festive event, held at Hyde Park and posed for pH๏τos.
Princess wrapped up warm in a white bobble hat, matching scarf and padded coat, while Emily, 35, cut a chic figure in a leather trench coat and ear muffs.
Emily married Peter Andre in 2015 and the couple have three children together; Amelia, 10, Theo, nine, and Arabella, whom they welcomed earlier this year.
Princess, who is the daughter of Peter and Katie Price, has been doing more frequent public appearances, but recently insisted she ‘is not a nepo-baby’.
The 17-year-old has already begun carving out a career for herself, bagging a slew of brand ambᴀssador deals, launching her own jewellery line and made her modelling debut in January, after signing a four-figure deal with PrettyLittleThing.
Princess and Emily Andre enjoyed a girls’ trip to Winter Wonderland in London on Wednesday
The 17-year-old joined her step mother at the VIP launch of the annual festive event, held at Hyde Park and posed for pH๏τos
But despite following her parents into the showbiz industry, Princess insists that her success is not a result of nepotism.
She has the same management team as her father, 51, and her older brother Junior, 19, and says she’s on track to be a millionaire by the age of 20.
In an interview with The Sun, Princess denied her celebrity parentage being the reason for her successful career, saying while she benefitted from a leg up at the start, she’d worked hard and was now famous in her own right.
She said: ‘It honestly doesn’t bother me, because I know that’s not the case. Obviously, it has helped, but if you don’t put the work in yourself, you’re not going to get anywhere. Their experience has helped get me to a certain point, but after that, I work for what I achieve.
‘I’m doing that independently and people now know me as me rather than my parents’ daughter. I know if I hadn’t put in the work, then I probably wouldn’t be where I am.’
Revealing what she has taken from her mum and dad, she said they have advised her to ‘be humble’ and to ‘work hard and aim high’, as she explained that eventually she would love to have her own reality show, following her parents’ ITV franchise Katie & Peter.
Princess also explained her thoughts on getting cosmetic surgery, after Katie underwent her sixth facelift and 17th boob job in the summer.
The teen admitted she gets compared to her mum a lot, and insisted while her many procedures hadn’t ‘put her off’, she wanted to steer clear of surgery and ’embrace natural beauty’.
Princess wrapped up warm in a white bobble hat, matching scarf and padded coat
Emily, 35, cut a chic figure in a leather trench coat and ear muffs
Princess, who is the daughter of Peter and Katie Price, has been doing more frequent public appearances, but recently insisted she ‘is not a nepo-baby’
The 17-year-old has already begun carving out a career for herself, bagging a slew of brand ambᴀssador deals, launching her own jewellery line and made her modelling debut in January
Read More Princess Andre denies being a ‘nepo baby’ and vows to avoid surgery and ’embrace natural beauty’
She explained: ‘I feel like there are a lot of comments comparing me to my mum, I guess because I’m her first daughter. They say things like: ‘Don’t have surgery, don’t change yourself,’ and I’ll let people say what they want to say, but I know in myself what I want to do and what I want to be. I feel like everyone is enтιтled to do what they want to their body. But I personally don’t look at [cosmetic surgery] and think: ‘Oh, yeah, I want to do that.’
‘I think it’s important, especially for the younger generation on social media, to embrace natural beauty. My sisters are 10, and I want to set an example to them that they’re amazing how they are.
‘You don’t need to change. I want my little sisters to look up to me and be happy in themselves. It’s natural for them to want to play around with make-up – that’s a girlie thing to do – but I always say they don’t need it.’