Rosie showed how quickly she got into shape after giving birth, wearing a skimрy swimsսit
On Tuesday, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley gave her Instagram followers a glimpse of her latest winter break, which was nowhere near her childhood home in south-west England.
The Devon-born model and actress flaunted her incredible post-pregnancy body in a vibrant red bikiոi while cradling her 10-month-old daughter Isabella on what appeared to be a tropical island getaway.

Further Instagram stories from the mother-of-two revealed swaying palm trees and sweeping coastal vistas. Rosie, 35, took Isabella and her eldest child, Jack, five, on a scenic speedboat ride.
The fashion-forward star also mentioned her taste for finer things, such as a stylish Prada bucket hat worn over a loose-fitting Chanel shirt as she flaunted her toned figure in another photo.
Rosie later posed in front of a full-length mirror in another selfie, this time wearing a stylish summer dress and using a black and white filter.

The British actress raises her two children, Jack and Isabella, with her fiancé, actor Jason Statham, 55.
The couple has been together since 2010 and announced their engagement in 2016, but they have previously stated that they are not in a hurry to marry until their children are older.
Despite admitting that marriage isn’t a top priority for her, Rosie told the Economic Times in 2018: ‘We’re looking forward to that time. It’s also not a high priority for us because we’re so content.

‘I think it’ll be fun to do it when the baby [Jack] is a little older and can be involved in the wedding.’
Rosie previously described the’shift in identity’ she felt after becoming a mother, which felt like’mourning the loss of [her] old life’.
‘For a period after I had my first son, there was a real shift in identity, and a sort of mourning of the loss of your old life, and who you were,’ she explained in an interview with Net-A-PORTER Porter’s magazine last year.
‘I just remember feeling like the rug was pulled out from underneath me,’ Rosie said of her transition from model to mother.

‘I’d had all these years of being really independent, of being able to come and go as I pleased, of being self-employed to some extent, of calling the shots, and then suddenly having [something] that really anchored me to home life,’ she says.
Rosie explained that she eventually ’embraced’ her new role and learned not to place so much importance on her appearance.
‘If you’re someone who, like me, attached a lot of identity to my physicality and the way I felt and looked, it took me a long time to come around,’ she said.
‘But I think once I stepped into the role and embraced it, everything relaxed a little. I did begin to feel a new sense of life.