Stacey Solomon sought the assistance of fellow new mom and blogger Molly-Mae Hague after making a gaffe on Instagram.
The Loose Women presenter described her troubles with achieving ‘newborn fresh’ hair with fans and urged them for assistance, as did the former Love Islander.
On her Instagram story, she updated fans and confessed she was hoping to capitalise on a new trend she had spotted with a scraped-back bun.
On Sunday, she tried unsuccessfully to reproduce the haircut and implored visitors of her online profiles for advice on how to perfect it.
Stacey and Molly-Mae have both just became mothers, with the PrettyLittleThing designer receiving daughter Bambi – whom she shares with her boxer boyfriend Tommy Fury – and the former XFactor competitor delivering her fifth child, Belle.
‘I simply need to know how to do this because it’s annoying me,’ she said on social media.
‘Thought I’d scrape my hair back into a bun today because I keep seeing people doing it. I seen Molly-Mae do it and she looks so beautiful, I call it newborn fresh.
‘Like, you’ve got a newborn so you chuck it into a bun and just look really pretty, natural, and it pulls all your face back.’
The actress went on to claim that when she tried it, she looked like Matilda’s Mistress Trunchbull and wondered, ‘Why? Why do I not look like newborn fresh, like Molly?’
‘I look like I’m going to shove my newborn into the chokey,” she said, referring to the spikey closet from the children’s film, which was recently adapted into a musical adaption.
‘Why doesn’t it suit me? Is it my face? I just need to know,’ she further pondered.
Stacey captioned the video, which she wore in a casual, no-make-up appearance and a grey hoodie, ‘Can you send me a newborn slick hair tutorial please @mollymae [sic]’.
Viewers hurried to comment on her haircut, prompting the actress to publish her fresh attempts to her account in the next slide.
One wrote: ‘It looks good! Pull down some strands by the ears and it’ll look even better’.
Another penned: ‘This did make me laugh Do the bun lower [sic]’.
‘You need to pull a little part in the front’, was a further fan suggestion.
Source My Celebrity Life.