
Bae The Label hosts a huge sale: Shop comfortable and stylish maternity clothing up to 40 per cent off
Bae The Label is a Melbourne-owned fashion company established in 2015 by two Melbourne mums.
The brand was born out of frustration with the lack of modern maternity clothing that aligned with a woman's pre-pregnancy style.
For more than nearly a decade, Bae has evolved into a trusted name for maternity and nursing wear that champions quality, functionality, and authenticity.
Every piece in the Bae collection is designed with longevity in mind.
It's this commitment to creating versatile, wearable essentials that make Bae more than just a maternity brand. It's a go-to label for women at every stage of motherhood, and one that continues to set the benchmark for modern maternity dressing.
The company's high-quality fabric and timeless designs ensure that the pieces will last, while also making you feel great whether you're carrying your bump or nursing your newborn.
The brand has everything from comfortable dresses to linen pants, t-shirts, jumpers and more.
Who said pregnancy can't be both stylish and comfortable?
Top sale picks
Live Light Jumper, was $109 now $79
Linear Maternity Pants, was $129 now $89
Only Gets Better T-shirt, was $89 now $59
Cloud Nine Knit Shorts, was $79 now $49
Got The Edge Knit Dress, was $129 now $79
Intrinsic Button Front Dress, was $129 now $79
Serenity Knit Maternity Skirt, was $79 now $39
Wrap Around You Maxi Dress, was $129 now $79
Good Things Zip Sweat, was $129 now $89
Double Time Tee Dress, was $89 now $69
To shop Bae The Label's full sale range, head to the website here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Wyndham City Council referred to IBAC as MP claims tens of millions 'flushed down the toilet' on failed IT project
A council in Melbourne's booming outer south-west has been referred to the state's anti-corruption watchdog over a failed IT project worth tens of millions of dollars. The issue emerged when representatives from Wyndham City Council faced a fiery parliamentary committee hearing into fraud and corruption controls in local government. Labor's MP for Point Cook, Mat Hilakari, questioned whether the council did enough to inform ratepayers about the cost blowout, which he put at $69 million. But the council defended its transparency, saying information about the project was publicly available. In 2018, the council appointed tech company Oracle Australia to provide software that could combine council functions on one platform. It was supposed to be a $20 million project, taking two years. But four years later, the project was running nearly $20 million over budget. So the council terminated the contract and engaged a new company, TechnologyOne, to do the work. Mr Hilakari told the inquiry he estimated the cost blowout for the entire project at nearly $70 million. "I would put it at probably around $69 million in overruns, and this hasn't been publicly disclosed until this point in time, is that right?" he asked. The council's chief executive, Stephen Wall, said he would take the issue of the cost on notice. "But that sounds excessive," he said. Mr Hilakari asked why the failure of the original project, and the cost overrun, had not been communicated to ratepayers. "Whose decision is it not to disclose these things to the public?" he asked. Wyndham Deputy Mayor Josh Gilligan said financial decisions were all available, but said no-one had asked about them. "I just take particular umbrage with the question that suggests that we were not or were somehow not wanting to disclose cost variation to a major project," he said. "I just completely dispute that." Mr Wall agreed. "All of council's financial transactions are transparent," he said. The ABC understands the council's handling of the issue has been referred to Victoria's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission, IBAC. The ABC understands another Wyndham councillor, Robert Szatkowski, has made a referral to Victoria's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission, IBAC, for matters that relate to the IT project. The ABC has contacted IBAC for comment. A referral to IBAC does not mean it will launch an investigation and the ABC is not suggesting that a referral implies any findings of wrongdoing. Councillor Gilligan pointed out to Mr Hilakari that the state government was also facing cost blowouts on various projects. "You would agree that cost overruns on a state level of hundreds of millions of dollars occur, on the regular?" he asked. "And we're very transparent about that," Mr Hilakari said. "As we are," Cr Gilligan insisted. "Well then you'd better tell me where the project fail of Oracle and the tens and tens of millions of dollars of ratepayer funds that were flushed down the toilet to be frank, where was that publicly disclosed?" Mr Wall said he would take that on notice, but said there was a clear business case and a tender process, and that the current IT project was a success. Wyndham council is facing backlash for diverting funds from developers in Point Cook to be used elsewhere in the municipality. Cr Gilligan told the hearing the council had a prerogative to spend money raised from Point Cook developments in another location. "That money can be spent in a location that is different to the one that you want it spent in," he said. "That is our prerogative, just as state and federal governments have their own prerogative within the realm of law to make decisions, this council has made a decision to look at spending it on an intergenerational project somewhere else." The committee is due to table its full report in November.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Glamour couple Jordan De Goey, Aisha Jade McKinnon drop ‘surprise' life update
Collingwood forward Jordan De Goey and his former reality TV star girlfriend Aisha Jade McKinnon have announced the 'surprise' news they are expecting a baby girl. De Goey, 29, has been held to just five games for the Pies in an injury-plagued 2025 season, although he is in line for an AFL return this weekend. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. New Zealander McKinnon, who found fame as a contestant on Big Brother and is now a fashion designer and influencer, met the footy bad boy in early 2024 after linking up on Instagram. They went public with their romance at Collingwood's best and fairest awards last year and have since bought a farm together. McKinnon's Instagram bio says 'Fashion, Beauty and little Farm life' and the celebrity couple used that platform to announce their happy news. 'In the midst of our changing lives we were blessed with the greatest surprise of them all,' they captioned a joint post on Sunday. 'Baby girl coming soon.' The post featured an ultrasound, a sweet photo of De Goey holding McKinnon's stomach and a video that appears to show the footy star getting a gender reveal gift from his partner (see below). The announcement has received more than 35,000 likes and over 800 comments, including a number from De Goey's Collingwood teammates. 'Unreal! Congrats to both of you,' wrote Josh Daicos. Model and Daicos' partner Annalise Dalins added: 'The best news!! Congratulations you two! Sending (so much) love.' Oleg Markov and Isaac Quaynor both wrote: 'Congrats guys.' Musician Bec Wilcock gushed: 'This makes me so happy!!! Bring in the girl squad.' McKinnon told the Herald Sun last year the couple have similar interests and are loving working on their farm about an hour outside Melbourne. 'He's really lovely. We definitely value our privacy, we connected on that, and we both have unique jobs and support each other,'' she said. 'We were like pen pals until we met. We're getting our hands dirty at the farm transforming it and having fun.' De Goey has played 176 games for the Pies, including the 2023 premiership, but hasn't featured since round eight due to an Achilles injury. He was then concussed at training in a collision with Brayden Maynard, setting back his return further, but he turned out in the VFL last weekend and is in line for a senior recall. Pick No. 5 in the 2014 national draft, De Goey has had a series of alcohol and violence related issues in the past, including an arrest in New York in 2021 over an alleged nightclub assault.

Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
How a century-old ‘zombie subdivision' became Melbourne's ‘worst case of urban blight'
The intergenerational failure to develop Solomon Heights has been blamed on a tangle of planning problems, according to Brimbank council analysis: it's hard to reach, with one road in and out of the precinct; its residential-sized lots are unsuitable for large-scale industry; and its neglected expanses are a refuge for several critically endangered plants and animals, including the striped legless lizard and the golden sun moth, which are protected under federal and state environmental laws. But the century-long campaign to develop Solomon Heights has never stopped. Glen Ora, a company that owns the undeveloped roads in the southern half of the precinct, has launched legal action to try to connect the area to water and kickstart development. The company has gone to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal, appealing Greater Western Water's refusal earlier this year to grant water connection permits in the precinct. A statement of contentions seen by The Age says the refusal 'would stifle and prevent the future creation of infrastructure works in the subdivision'. The company has also approached the Department of Transport and Planning about developing Solomon Heights for housing, but it has been told there are no plans to rezone the area from industrial to residential. Glen Ora director Ron Silverstein was reluctant to comment to this masthead about his company's legal bid to force Greater Western to plumb the estate before VCAT has made a decision. 'What I'm prepared to say is there's an enormous amount of green tape involved in a transaction like this … from the Commonwealth, state and council,' he said. 'There's a huge regulatory system, which is complex, very expensive, and you need very deep pockets to do something like this.' The company is fighting to develop the Solomon Heights as it awaits a separate judgment over whether it is liable for rubbish dumping on the land. The Commonwealth-run Australian Rail Track Corporation, which owns land in Solomon Heights, has sued Glen Ora for more than $828,000, plus costs and interest. According to a statement of claim filed in court, subcontractors hired by Glen Ora dumped contaminated construction spoil, including asbestos, copper and lead, on ARTC-owned land. Loading Glen Ora has denied liability for the dumped spoil and a judgment is pending. When The Age visited Solomon Heights last week, it was clear rubbish dumping was a persistent problem. There were piles of old tyres, a rusted car body, mounds of mangled wires and rotting timber. The flat, grassy terrain is also choked with artichoke thistle and prickly pear. But Silverstein was eager to show this masthead something else that grows hidden among the weeds, and which is key to the precinct's future. 'One of the features of this property is that it's got a critically endangered plant and I don't want you to laugh when you see it. It's extremely valuable,' he said. In an overgrown corner of the estate near the Melbourne-Sydney railway line, eight spiny rice-flower plants grow, although only a trained eye would spot them. Each critically endangered plant is marked by a stake tied with a ribbon. The delicate yellow-flowered plants are protected under environment and biodiversity laws. There are 240 spiny rice-flowers in the estate, according to ecological surveys. 'People look at them and they can't understand why they're so important, and the answer is, I don't know either,' Silverstein said. Brimbank City Council has spent several years in a state of planning paralysis over Solomon Heights. In a 2019 report, it named the existence of protected plants and animals as a key impediment to development, along with the difficulty of getting property owners in the precinct to agree on a way forward. In 2022, it completed a feasibility study into creating a conservation reserve in the northern part of the estate. The Age sought a copy of the study via a freedom-of-information request but was denied, with the council saying the report is confidential. 'The document contains land use planning information, being information that, if prematurely released, is likely to encourage speculation in land values, which can be commercially sensitive,' Brimbank said. Individual lots are currently listed for more than $230,000 each. Loading The council said it has no plans to pursue public acquisition of any part of the estate. Lancashire argues that the southern part of the estate should be developed into an industrial estate that would boost local employment, and the northern section converted into an environmental reserve. 'There is a way forward,' he says. 'To see that this has been going on in my community for 100 years is gut-wrenching … we've done environmental study after environmental study. We need to stop the delays, we need to come back with a report on how to actually do it.' Monash University senior lecturer in urban planning Dr Elizabeth Taylor has studied Solomon Heights and other 'zombie subdivisions' like it, which are 'the living dead of the real estate market', seemingly trapped in time and unable to be developed. In her research, Taylor wrote that many potential solutions have been posed for the estate but 'a default position of inaction has defined it for nearly a century'. This is partly because current planning laws were not written with a 99-year-old riddle like Solomon Heights in mind. But mostly, it comes down to the cost of fixing the problem and the likely gap between what the council would be prepared to spend on compensation versus what the private landowners would demand. 'You can imagine Solomon Heights maybe being a cool park or something like that, but it just gets stuck because nobody wants to pay for it,' Taylor said.