
Primark's dress is a copy of a £135 designer version – it gives you a gorgeous hourglass figure & perfect for date night
The sleeveless mini dress has a corset style bodice to ensure it gives you the perfect silhouette and hourglass figure.
At just £23 comes in white, pink and a floral print design, but those shopping instore can also pick up a baby blue version.
The back of the dress features chunky shoulder straps that descend into a deep-V open back and finished with a cute bow at the back's base.
Made mainly of cotton and some elastane, the dress is perfect for the warmer weather because the material has some give to it while being very breathable.
The Primark dress is a dupe version of Odd Muse's high waist, square neck mini dress which comes at the eye-watering price of £135, but the website is currently having a 30 percent off sale, so it is available for £94.
Viral hit
Primark first launched the popular dress in black in October 2024 and it quickly went viral.
When the dress was relaunched this summer in a wider range of colour, social media users rushed to post that they'd spotted it at their local Primark stor.
One TikToker, @prmark_lincoln, shared a video of the dress in-store and captioned the post, "love this."
Elsewhere on the 'We Love The High Street' Instagram page, fashion lovers expressed their excitement at seeing the dress in new colours.
"So cute. Love them," wrote one person.
Another added: "So beautiful."
'Finally a cute collection' shoppers cry as Rita Ora drops summer Primark range
And a third commented: "The floral is so pretty."
The bodice dress return to Primark comes just days after fans went wild for a timeless piece to add to their wardrobes.
Fashion influencer Perrie Sian tried on the look in her latest Primark haul video.
Hidden treasure
She described the look as a finding a hidden "treasure" in the shop's denim trove.
Primark's history
PRIMARK first opened in 1969 as Pennies in Dublin, hoping to provide affordable fashion in Ireland.
A Primark store officially opened as Primark in 1974 in Derby.
The retailer now has 193 stores across the UK and 441 stores worldwide with a goal of running 530 stores by the end of 2026.
Perrie advised her audience to go in search for "denim goodies" such as the mini dress she picked up.
The Denim Mini Dress is currently available for just £18 from Primark, half the price of a similar Asos look.
Hashtags

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


Times
30 minutes ago
- Times
Teaser 3275
Against the Odds I have taken a number of playing cards (more red than black) from a standard pack of 52 cards and distributed them in a certain way in two piles, each containing both red and black cards. A card is taken at random from the smaller pile and placed in the larger pile. The larger pile is shuffled; a card is taken at random from it and placed in the smaller pile. There is a one in eight chance that the number of red and black cards in each pile will be the same as they were originally. How many black cards in total were used? Send your solution to: The Sunday Times Teaser 3275, PO Box 29, Colchester, Essex CO2 8GZ or email The first two correct solutions opened after next Saturday each win a £20 Waterstones voucher. Open to 18+ UK & ROI residents only. Solution to Teaser 3273 52 The winners are: N Jones, Gillingham, Dorset; A Skidmore, Ripley, Derbyshire.


The Sun
30 minutes ago
- The Sun
Emma Raducanu gives new insight into her lovelife amid Carlos Alcaraz romance rumours
EMMA RADUCANU gave fresh insight into her lovelife after the Carlos Alcaraz romance rumours. Raducanu and Alcaraz announced they have teamed up on the court for the US Open mixed doubles event in New York. 5 5 But there have been suggestions the duo are linking up off it, too, especially after she watched the Spaniard in action at Queen's. A source exclusively revealed to SunSport the pair had a 'spark' and arrived at Queen's within minutes of each other amid suggestions of spending cosy days together. But Raducanu played down their possible relationship by giggling "we're just good friends" before Wimbledon started. However, after Wednesday's emphatic Centre Court victory over Marketa Vondrousova, she joked she had never been heartbroken. Among the VIPs in the Royal Box for the match was Olivia Rodrigo, fresh from her Glastonbury headline set. Raducanu claimed she did not know who was in the posh seats when she spoke in her on-court interview, insisting she was so focused on her match to notice. When speaking to the BBC, though, she confessed she had spotted golfer Tommy Fleetwood. But when told American singer-songwriter Rodrigo was in the crowd, Raducanu came back with a quick and cheeky response. The Brit, relaxed after booking her third-round date with world No1 Aryna Sabalenka, quipped: "She's got some great heartbreak songs. "If you're ever going through it, she's the one." Carlos Alcaraz claims he 'will do whatever she wants me to do' in revealing Emma Raducanu interview after Wimbledon win The BBC interviewer replied: "Thanks for the advice." Then the tennis ace laughed: "I wouldn't know though, of course not." Raducanu - who was told she was banned from having a boyfriend by her parents growing up - previously went out with billionaire heir Carlo Agostinelli, a former Harrow School head boy. Ex-Tottenham academy footballer Carlo is the son of tycoon Robert Agostinelli. The couple got together in May 2023 and were arm-in-arm at Paris Fashion Week as well as enjoying luxury holidays together in Greece and Mexico. 5 Wimbledon 2025 LIVE - follow all the latest scores and updates from a thrilling fortnight at SW19 But after they split up, they unfollowed each other on social media. On her relationship with Alcaraz and how they became friends, Raducanu said: "I've known him for years. "Wimbledon 2021 was the first time I started getting to know him, and I had a good run there and then also again in the US Open in 2021. "We have a good relationship still. He's obviously overtaken me a lot, but it's nice that we have that from a while ago. "I think for all of us, we really kind of value those connections that we had from when we were young because when you become a bit more known or a bit more successful, you just find yourself reverting back to people you knew from a young age because you're like, that's a real genuine connection. "Because it becomes very busy and you have a lot more friends but the ones that you've known for a long time mean a lot more to you." 5


Times
30 minutes ago
- Times
Comedy gold garden is too Partridge by far for me
I didn't really understand why Alan Partridge had a garden at RHS Hampton Court. He doesn't actually exist but, far more importantly, he doesn't even like gardening. 'That's right,' grinned the helpful man from Audible at the garden, 'Alan says that his favourite thing about gardening is sitting and watching the gardener work!' That cleared up exactly zero. His 'interview' on the RHS website only explained why he wouldn't want a garden. 'When I think green fingers,' he says, 'I tend to think of people I'd rather not be bracketed with — Kermit the Frog, Incredible Hulk, or a chap I knew whose finger got infected when he trapped it in a drawer hiding something from his wife.' Still, Alan is all over 'his' garden, with its path through 'Norfolk-inspired' trees and perennial planting interrupted by large pipes with Alan's face on them. 'It's a sound bath!' chirped another Audible helper. 'Do you want to come in?' It was so hot that what I really wanted to do was lie down. Now Alan himself (via the pipe) was inviting me too: 'Go ahead, join me, for an intimate aural bath.' His voice oozed over the planting and not in a healthy way. Reader, I had to flee. Apparently, all of this is in aid of his podcast. The garden won a gold. Alan won't be proud. It was absolutely scorchio on Monday at Hampton Court and, in the afternoon, at the very hottest point of what felt like the hottest day of the year, a small group of VIPs gathered in a heat haze in front of the giant flower-clad RHS sign. Two important looking cars arrived. It was either royalty or Mary Berry (almost the same thing). It was Sophie, as everyone seems to call the Duchess of Edinburgh, who looked cool, calm and collected. She went off to admire the roses and then inspected the temperate rainforest garden. She still looked entirely unbothered by the heat. Impressive, frankly. Who would have thought, decades ago, that Edward and Sophie would be such hard-working royals? I was on a bus, going through King's Cross, when I saw the protesters crowded on to the pavement. 'Boycott cashless!' said the yellow signs, 'Cash is freedom'. Lorries honked in support. Some of the placards displayed signs of paranoia. Are 'they' really planning a digital surveillance state? Why would 'they' go to all that trouble when our phones, banks, apps follow our every move anyway? But I do think that cash is king, actually. Real money, in your hand, feels different from tapping a bank card. Out of London, lots of businesses prefer it. Then there's the tooth fairy, who doesn't deal in cards either. I am writing this on American Independence Day and, by happy coincidence, because I am making myself peruse the books I am about to declutter, I have been reading Signing Their Lives Away, about the men who signed the Declaration of Independence. There were 56 of them, though most people, including Americans, would only be able to name four (Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, Hancock). And, no, since you ask, George Washington didn't sign, though Josiah Bartlett (immortalised in The West Wing) did. Each of the 56 is introduced with a tagline along the lines of 'the signer everyone loved to hate' or 'the signer who slept in caves'. Then there was poor John Morton who was 'the first signer to die'. Not sure that's much of an accomplishment. The book is now too good to declutter.