CELEBRITY

Edwina Bartholomew’s twinning moment with Molly

Two peas in a pod!
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Edwina Bartholomew’s daughter Molly is already eight months old, and she’s the spitting image of her Sunrise host mum as seen in a recent throwback picture.

WATCH BELOW: Edwina Bartholomew shares video update of baby Molly

Taking to Instagram, Edwina shared an adorable photo of Molly sitting upright with a collection of colourful building blocks.

However, the proud mum-of-one also shared a throwback photo of herself and her siblings as a baby herself in the 1980s playing with the exact same toys.

“Same age. Same blocks. 37 years between photos,” Edwina wrote in the caption.

“Celebrating eight months of silly songs and wide eyed wonder this week. Sitting up. Chit chatting. Growing an impressive comb over. All in a day’s work, Miss Molly xx”

Molly
“Same age. Same blocks. 37 years between photos.” (Credit: Instagram)
Throwback
Baby Edwina was a cutie! (Credit: Instagram)

The likeness between mum and daughter certainly caught Edwina’s fans off guard.

“Oh my gosh!!!! Identical!!! Love this,” one follower commented.

“Wow the likeness is unreal,” penned another.

“Mini you!!!” exclaimed Studio 10′s Sarah Harris.

Family Feud host and soon to be dad-of-three Grant Denyer also remarked: “Oh the pure joy of knocking them over!!”

Edwina
Edwina and husband Neil welcomed Molly in December 2019. (Credit: Instagram)

New mum Edwina has been keeping it real when it comes to parenting on social media.

The 37-year-old shared an all-too-real moment when she shared a selfie that featured a questionable dark patch on her denim shirt.

“I paired this fantastic @cereslife tencil shirt with leggings, white sneakers and pee,” she jokingly captioned the post.

Edwina even found the humour when her husband Neil Varcoe cheekily commented: “Looks hot!” to which Edwina replied, “It was warm.”

Edwina
Keeping it real! (Credit: Instagram)

Edwina and Neil welcomed baby Molly in December 2019, right in the middle of Australia’s bushfire crisis.

During those early days, Edwina admitted she found it “really comforting that, when the world is chaotic outside, the day to day of being a mum doesn’t change.”

“No matter who you are or where you live or what you do for a living, the experience of loving a baby is universal. We are changing nappies, worrying about sleep, cleaning up baby dribble. It’s the same for everyone,” she told the Australian Women’s Weekly.

“There are days when it’s tough or it’s isolating and you’re not quite sure what you’re doing – and I’m sure that will continue for many years to come.”

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