
Bianca Censori flashes peachy bum in sheer thong underwear and crawls on her knees in racy pics taken by Kanye West
and YEEZY architect has shared yet another sizzling
trio of photographs taken by her husband Kanye West.
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Bianca Censori has posed up yet another storm in sheer underwear
Credit: Instagram/@biancacensori
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She even crawled on all fours as she looked into the camera lens
Credit: @ye/Instagram
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Turning around, Bianca then displayed her peachy bottom
Credit: @ye/Instagram
Wearing a blond wig and some sheer lingerie, Bianca left little to the imagination in three stunning snaps.
In the first of three that she shared, Bianca could be standing up straight while displaying her washboard abs and ample assets.
The second photo was far racier and saw her on all fours as she crawled on the floor.
Read More about Bianca
As Bianca crawled across the floor, she almost busted out of her tiny bra as her cleavage was in full view.
The third snap then saw her turned around with her peachy booty on display.
"Japan October 2024 shot by
@ye," she penned in each of the captions.
Fans were stunned by the snaps and quick to swoon over her enviable body in the raunchy shoot.
Most read in Celebrity
Many people commented with flame emojis, while one person begged: "More please."
"Bianca wear some actual clothes please," pleaded a second.
Kanye West 'paid' Bianca Censori $100k to wear candy bra and thong in NYC after she 'first told him no'
"Most clothes she's worn all year," said a third.
"Okay but wtf does YE know about cameras?" asked a third, referring to how the snaps were taken on a Polaroid camera.
Bianca left little to the imagination in each of the snaps, with her donning the same minimal underwear in each photo.
The Aussie model has been
Bianca Censori and Kanye West's relationship
Bianca Censori was born on January 5, 1995, in Melbourne, Australia
Before her current full-time job, the 30-year-old started a jewelry company called Nylons after leaving high school.
After working as a student architect for three years, she completed a master's degree between 2019 and 2020 ahead of moving to Los Angeles.
In a radio interview, a childhood friend of Bianca's claimed that Kanye slid into her DMs on Instagram.
The rapper reportedly said, "Come and work for me."
At which point she says the designer moved to LA to join his company Yeezy as the "head of architecture" - and has been since November 2020.
WEDDING BELLS
On Friday, October 6, 2023,
The couple tied the knot under a "confidential marriage license" in the state of California.
The two wed in Palo Alto, California, according to the document.
The wedding came just one month after
In all of the snaps, Bianca is stood in front of a white backdrop while showing off her famous curves.
This November will mark the couple's third wedding anniversary.
Shortly after
The pair then got hitched just days after his divorce from the SKIMS founder was finalized.
Since their nuptials, Kanye and Bianca often step out in sizzling and NSFW displays - often sparking backlash from the public and fans online.
Bianca seemingly has a penchant for wearing very little clothing, and often has her breasts and private regions on display while out and about.
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The couple got wed in 2022
Credit: Getty

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The Irish Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
I saw Ozzy's death coming but it still took my breath away – when giants fall it's hard to accept, says Alice Cooper
OZZY OSBOURNE and Alice Cooper – kindred spirits and fellow travellers in hard rock for nearly six decades. Both were born in 1948, on different sides of the Atlantic of course, yet with so much in common. 7 Alice and Ozzy, both born in 1948, had a remarkably similar approach to theatrical rock, make-up, hellraising . . . and unfortunate winged creatures Credit: Jenny Risher 7 Alice confided: 'I always saw Ozzy as a cross between the Prince Of Darkness, which is the persona his fans saw, and the court jester' Credit: Handout 7 Alice says he and Ozzy were part of a rock fraternity Credit: Peter Cronin The black eye make-up with fingernails to match, the wild shoulder-length hair, the flamboyant gothic outfits, the showmanship, the humour, the hellraising. Oh, and the notorious incidents involving live creatures on stage — in Ozzy's case a bat, in The rock gods both hailed from tough industrial cities, Birmingham and Maybe this is one explanation for their loud, rebellious form of escapism. READ MORE ON OZZY OSBOURNE On Tuesday morning, before we learned of Ozzy's sad passing aged 76, I had the chance to catch up with Alice during his arena tour of the UK. Hours later, as news filtered through that the Prince Of Darkness had left us, he took to the stage in Cardiff. His typically swashbuckling show, including a trademark mock beheading, ended with Alice announcing on behalf of his band and crew: 'God rest Ozzy.' Then he led the crowd in a thunderous chant of 'Ozzy! Ozzy! Ozzy!' Most read in Celebrity After the gig, he was able to reflect more fully on the loss of the much-loved Brummie. 'The whole world is mourning Ozzy,' he said. 'Over his long career, he earned immense respect among his peers and from fans around the world as an unmatched showman and cultural icon. Ozzy Osbourne top five greatest moments 'When we lose one of our own, it bleeds' 'I always saw Ozzy as a cross between the Prince Of Darkness, which is the persona his fans saw, and the court jester. That was the side that his family and friends saw. 'He was and will continue to be a rock 'n' roll legend. Rock 'n' roll is a family and a fraternity. When we lose one of our own, it bleeds. 'I wish I would have gotten to know my brother Ozzy better. ' 'A titanic boulder has crashed, but rock will roll on.' Well, we all know that time is going to take us rockers, but when the giants fall, it's really hard to accept. Alice Cooper on Ozzy's death In addition to his statement, Alice has revealed that he and Ozzy 'never really ran in the same circle for some reason' but their paths often crossed. He says: 'Ozzy and I did many shows together over the years. 'One of my favourite memories is when he sang with me on the song Hey Stoopid, a crowd favourite to this day and a staple of our setlist.' The idea of them singing, 'Hey-hey-hey-hey/Hey stoopid!' to each other conjures a priceless image. Now 'Well, we all know that time is going to take us rockers, but when the giants fall, it's really hard to accept,' adds the 77-year-old. 'Even though everybody saw it coming with Ozzy, it took our breath away when it happened. 'So Ozzy, your records and your music and your legend and all that you brought — the humour to the rock business — will live on forever. 'We're gonna miss you, man! Rest easy Ozzy, and we'll see you on the other side.' For many British schools, it was the last day of term before the summer holidays, bringing to mind his most famous song, School's Out. 'That song is still on every radio station here,' says Alice of the shouty singalong which hit No1 in the UK on August, 12, 1972, and stayed there for three weeks. He continues: 'You never know when you're going to write an anthem. An anthem is one of those songs that kids will still be singing a hundred years from now because they relate to it. 'So long as there is school, School's Out will be everybody's favourite song at the end of the year. It's the only song I've written that I was totally sure of. I said, 'If this isn't a hit, I shall be selling shoes somewhere'.' It came with the immortal chorus of, 'school's out for summer, school's out forever', and lines like, 'no more pencils, no more books, no more teachers' dirty looks'. Alice admits 'it's very subversive-sounding' but that 'it's a real celebration of the last three minutes of the last day of school. For every kid, it's just joy'. This brings us to the reason I'm talking to Alice in the first place — his big reunion with the original Alice Cooper Band. Formed in Phoenix, Arizona, they released seven albums between 1969 and 1973 and School's Out, with its hit title track, was the fifth. We were a band from Phoenix that never should have made it, except that we had a spark that nobody else had. Alice on his band Among their other best-loved 'shock rock' creations were I'm Eighteen, Hello Hooray, Elected, No More Mr Nice Guy and Billion Dollar Babies. In 1974, the band split, amicably but exhausted, and the frontman began his enduring solo career with his Welcome To My Nightmare LP. Now the original line-up of Alice, Mike Bruce, Dennis Dunnaway and Neal Smith have reunited to make their first studio album together in more than 50 years. Titled The Revenge Of Alice Cooper, the album effortlessly summons the spirit of their Seventies heyday and incorporates a posthumous appearance by late guitarist Glen Buxton. Alice had met Glen and Dennis in 1963 at Cortez High School in Phoenix, after moving there from Detroit. 'Alice Cooper… a good grandmother name' He recalls: 'We were all 1,500m and 3,000m runners and when The Beatles came out, we looked at each other and went, 'Oh man, we've got to do that'. 'So we learned a couple of songs and played at parties, then it just got bigger and bigger and bigger. 7 Alice with Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne at a London awards bash in 2007 Credit: Dave Hogan 7 Original members of the Alice Cooper Band are returning with a new album, 50 years later 'Eventually, we went to LA and Frank Zappa said to us, 'I have no idea what you guys are doing, so I'm going to sign you.' That was a great compliment. We actually confused Zappa!' (You know, one of the most zany rock musicians that ever lived.) Alice tries to put his finger on what made them successful. 'We were a band from Phoenix that never should have made it,' he decides, 'except that we had a spark that nobody else had. 'We had this little theatrical thing going and we also wanted to be America's Yardbirds,' he adds in reference to the British band that helped launch the careers of In 1968, the band changed their name from Nazz because it was taken by Todd Rundgren. During a brainstorming session, they tried to think of 'somebody's grandmother'. 'Who can think of a more grandmother name than Alice Cooper?' says the man who later legally morphed from Vincent Furnier into Alice Cooper. 'I said, 'It would throw everybody right off', and everybody agreed. 'We went through all these other names and we kept coming back to Alice Cooper — it just stuck.' At that time, Alice also began experimenting with face paint and developing the outlandish stage image (snakes and chickens included) that he's loved for. 'This girl came up to me and said, 'Have you ever seen this guy?' And she showed me a picture of Arthur Brown.' Brown, a Brit, is remembered for global hit Fire, for which he would don a burning helmet. Let's just say the music and performance were incendiary. Alice continues: 'We had the same make-up and I went, 'Are you kidding me?' I'd never heard of this guy but we were on the same wavelength. 'I realised I had a kindred brother in England. Arthur and I ended up as great, great friends.' He was brilliant, like the statue of David. Every girl in the world loved this guy — the tortured poet obsessed with death. Alice on Jim Morrison of The Doors He recalls early live forays in LA at Whisky A Go Go and The Cheetah Club, and thinking, until he saw them, that other acts on the bill, Pink Floyd and Then, in 1970, producer Bob Ezrin took things to the next level. Today, he's regarded as the unofficial sixth member of the band, a bit like 'fifth Beatle' George Martin. He was in charge of their breakthrough hit I'm Eighteen, giving some much-needed advice along the way. 'We kept trying to be The Yardbirds,' remembers Alice. 'And Bob kept saying, 'No, this song's about a dumb teenager, so it's got to sound like that'. 'And we were dumb teenagers, so it was pretty easy. We just dumbed it down and the simplicity was really powerful.' Now, the surviving members are all in their seventies, but you wouldn't know from the raw energy on their comeback album, The Revenge Of Alice Cooper. Anyone who has seen Alice live will probably have seen a menacing boa constrictor draped around his neck. The album begins with a song named after a snake of a different kind, Black Mamba. It features a free-flowing cameo from Robby Krieger of The Doors because, affirms Alice, 'Robby is the only guy who could have played that kind of snaky guitar part. He nailed it.' The mention of Krieger inevitably prompts one of his great rock 'n' roll tales. 'We opened for The Doors for a while,' Alice recalls. 'They were the first band to take us under their wing when we came in [to Los Angeles] from Phoenix. 'They allowed us to watch them record and we got to know them really well.' I ask Alice about The Doors' mercurial frontman Jim Morrison, who was found dead aged 27 in 1971 in a Paris apartment. The many-years-sober singer says: 'I was drinking so we got along real well. We just drank and talked and drank. 'He was brilliant, like the statue of David. Every girl in the world loved this guy — the tortured poet obsessed with death.' Alice got to witness 'Lizard King' Jim's incredible stage presence up close. 'Glen was our Keith Richards' 'He was electric, he was James Dean. He'd saunter up to the stage and take half a minute to light a cigarette. 'Then he'd sing and every girl would drop to their knees.' The new album also features a loving tribute to the Alice Cooper Band's dear departed guitarist, Glen Buxton. Called What A Syd, it brings this response from Alice: 'Glen was our 'Everybody loved him but the only person I ever saw him jam with was [Pink Floyd's] Syd Barrett. 'When everyone else was slowing down rock 'n' roll-wise with what they were doing to their bodies, he just kept going. 'There was no stopping him. By 49, he looked like he was 78, 80 years old.' Finally, we return to the mischief that both Alice and Ozzy became renowned for. 'There's a lot of humour on this album,' he says. 'I can't help it, that's just the way I write. 'Everybody's telling the most important song is Blood On The Sun. They say it's poetic, it flows, it makes your mind go, 'Oh my gosh!' 'What are they talking about? Every single line in that song is a movie title. It sounds important but it's not at all!' So that explains him singing 'Don't Cry, It's Only Thunder' (1982 war movie), 'From Dusk Till Dawn' (1996 horror film) and so on. Surely Alice's fellow eternal prankster Ozzy would approve! 7 The Alice Cooper Band had already nailed the outlandish look in 1970 7 Alice became good friends with The Doors star Jim Morrison, who died aged 27


The Irish Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Erling Haaland's girlfriend Isabel Haugseng treated to ultra-rare £330,000 handbag as couple enjoy break in Rome
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Sunday World
6 minutes ago
- Sunday World
‘This nearly broke me' – Irish style guru who bounced back to launch fabulous collection
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I was absolutely shattered.' The culprit? COVID-19. 'It was a huge shop, 5,000 square feet, and when weddings stopped, so did we,' she says. 'It was the second lockdown that sealed it. I knew then I had to walk away.' But endings, as they often do, opened up something unexpected. While others might have crumbled under the pressure, the Dubliner chose to create — upskilling, and learning to sew and draft her own patterns in the prestigious, Grafton Academy. That led to a radical rethinking of occasionwear, grounded in sustainability, longevity, and body inclusivity. And so Monessa Joan was born. 'I sold a lot of occasionwear in Vanity Fair, and I always knew when I was selling a dress that it was for a one-off occasion. If it got worn twice, it'd be doing well. And I always kind of felt bad for the outfit because it would be so beautiful. I'd be saying, isn't that terrible? That's going to hang in somebody's wardrobe now. 'When I lost the boutique — well, even before that — I was thinking, if you could just take those sleeves off, or take that belt off… we'd be able to wear clothes much more often. So the idea was kind of always there.' News in 90 Seconds - July 25th Now, through Monessa Joan, she's bringing to life a sustainable, ultra-wearable collection that is produced entirely in Ireland. The brand's standout feature? Detachable elements — sleeves, bows, belts — that completely transform a piece depending on the event, season, or mood. 'I know with sustainability, everyone hops on the bandwagon, but I did want something that could be repurposed and worn in lots of different ways. 'Next year, you don't need a new dress. You just need new sleeves,' she laughs. 'And maybe a different pair of earrings. It's a playful but powerful approach, rooted in her unparalleled knowledge and appreciation of Irish women's bodies and deep-rooted insecurities. 'I've dressed thousands of women. I know what makes them feel self-conscious, what makes them glow. We can go up and down half a stone in any given month — our clothes should work with us, not against us. I've seen too many women cry in changing rooms. I want to change that.' With sizes ranging from 8 to 24, and bespoke adjustments available, inclusivity isn't a buzzword, it's the foundation of the entire edit. The silhouettes are fluid and forgiving, but far from frumpy. The fabrics? A soft, satin-backed crepe that floats over the body. 'Honestly, the way women light up when they try these pieces on — before they've even seen themselves in the mirror — it gives me goosebumps.' And while the designs themselves are clever, Cronin's impact goes deeper. She also runs confidence workshops and online courses, helping women to not only understand their body shapes but to also demystify sizing to silence the harsh inner voice many hear in the fitting room. 'I am not teaching women about body shape to tell you what you can and can't wear. I think women have enough rules in their life without having to add further rules around clothes. 'The number on the label should have absolutely no power over your sense of self. It really shouldn't because it is so arbitrary. I don't think women understand that the difference between a size is so tiny,' explains the designer who opened her first business, a tiny little hat shop - the much adored Mad Hatter - in Dublin in 2001 'You can wear whatever you want, once you understand it. When you are in a fitting room and something doesn't fit, I go through a whole lesson on sizing because I understand it so well. I know this because I stocked over 60 brands in the boutique knowing that not one of them were the same. Even within a brand sizing is different. A size 12 in one shape is different to a size 12 in another shape. 'I think once you understand that a certain pattern wasn't cut for your pear shaped hips, it was cut for a strawberry shaped body, then women understand, it's not their body, it's the dress.' She adds: 'I still have women that message me on Instagram who took my course and say, 'sizes don't bother me anymore, they are nothing to do with me and my body, it's how the clothes were made.' Already stocked in boutiques from Killarney (MacBees Boutique) to Leixlip (Sketch The Label), and with UK expansion now underway, Nessa proves you can rewrite your story at any stage. 'If you'd told me three years ago that I'd be showing in London and launching a brand from scratch at 50, I'd have laughed in your face,' she says. When I look at how far I have come, I am just so proud that everything is made and produced in Ireland. The support from the industry has also been overwhelming. I've opened three accounts in the UK for next year – it's incredible.' Reflecting on one of the darkest periods of her life, Nessa can appreciate the power of redirection, now more than ever. 'Things happen for a reason. I would never have had the time, running my shop, to do this. It would have always just stayed as an idea. So one door closes, another opens.' The entire venture is of course, a family affair, with her husband, Dino, designing the website. But it was her mum Maeve, her cheerleader and confidant, that ensured the style guru was destined to have a career in fashion. 'My mum is the most glamorous woman I know. A teacher all her life, if she had been born in a different time she would definitely have had a career in fashion. 'Every Saturday afternoon as a child was spent in the fitting rooms of shops. She wouldn't always buy, but loved nothing more than trying on clothes, and I'm the exact same. She has always adored clothes, and always looked like she was stepping out in a fashion show. 'Her love of clothes definitely influenced my path. Clothes for me are powerful, you can't have a bad day if you're wearing something you love. It's grand just doesn't cut it, I love every single item in my wardrobe. As for what's next? Expect more mix-and-match innovation, playful colourways, and — in true Cronin style — a surprise accessory or two. 'Who knows what I'll dream up next?' she smiles. 'You'll just have to wait and see.'