logo
Nadia Bartel risks major wardrobe malfunction in EXTREMELY short dress as she parties in Mykonos

Nadia Bartel risks major wardrobe malfunction in EXTREMELY short dress as she parties in Mykonos

Daily Mail​15 hours ago

Nadia Bartel is having a ball on holiday in Mykonos with boyfriend Peter Dugmore.
And the former AFL WAG has been dressing to impress as she shows off her figure during the luxury getaway.
The 40-year-old made a bold and daring choice on Wednesday as she stepped out in a tiny polka dot dress.
The immensely short cut of the frock ensured that Nadia was flashing her underwear as she worked her angles in the flirty number in a post to Instagram Stories.
Nadia debated if she should carry a red designer bag with the look - but in the end ditched it and let her racy dress do the talking.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
Nadia has been having the time of her life and headed out to a restaurant and day club in Greece on Tuesday.
She enjoyed a raucous lunch at the ritzy Spilia Seaside Restaurant with her 'throuple', Peter and their best friend Chris Kontos.
Chris made several posts about their get-together, including one photo which showed Nadia cuddling up between him and Peter in a booth.
'Mykonos Hottest Trupple,' he joked in the caption.
After sharing a video of the bowl of spaghetti the trio ordered to the table, Chris uploaded another wild clip.
In it, the group of friends could be seen hollering and dancing to house music at the restaurant after drinking '45 tequilas'.
Nadia also shared her own content of the trip as she cuddled up with Chris and Peter, before posting picturesque views of the seaside.
The Henne founder also flaunted her figure in a $650 form-fitting brown dress by Maygel Coronel.
She completed her look with a natural makeup look as she hid her eyes behind a pair of dark sunglasses.
It comes after Nadia enjoyed a holiday in Paris earlier this month with partner Peter and her two children.
The social media sensation shared a series of updates from the luxury trip to Instagram.
The images show Nadia cuddling up to Peter and her kids, sons Aston and Henley, as they played tourist in the French city of love.
Nadia and Peter are going from strength to strength, having met after Peter slid into the fashionista's Instagram DMs.
'I don't usually respond to Instagram messages, and I don't know if it was because I was feeling lonely, but I responded,' she told her followers on Instagram.
'I looked at his profile and we had some mutual friends and he looked like a nice guy. He also didn't have a lot of posts – and I liked that.
'I really enjoyed the chats, but I never thought I'd ever see this person – it was just nice to chat.'
'I was in a good place with my mental health and I didn't want to put myself in a position where I could be hurt again,' she added.
The designer eventually met up with Peter at The Tan, a popular running route in Melbourne, and said they have been together ever since.
Speaking to Daily Mail Australia, Nadia recently revealed marriage was currently not on the cards for the couple.
'I don't think so,' she laughed.
'You know when you've done that then you're like I don't know of I'd do that again.
'But when you meet someone that you feel like you want to marry, it's a good feeling. We are so happy. He's a good boy.'
Nadia and Peter went Instagram official in December 2022.
The pair confirmed their relationship by getting hot and heavy in a photo shared to Instagram Stories.
Nadia announced her split from retired AFL star Jimmy Bartel in August 2019, five years after they tied the knot on the Bellarine Peninsula.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Antiques Roadshow's Bunny auctions off rabbit collection in Newbury
Antiques Roadshow's Bunny auctions off rabbit collection in Newbury

BBC News

time44 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Antiques Roadshow's Bunny auctions off rabbit collection in Newbury

Antiques Roadshow expert Bunny Campione returned to the rostrum for the first time in decades to start the sale of her prized rabbit collection, which sold for about £24, sale at Special Auction Services in Newbury, Berkshire, included a rare 1906 Steiff wool plush Peter Rabbit, which sold for £7, was gifted to Campione after it was found in a bin in Athens, Greece, and had been expected to fetch between £4,000 and £6, said she "thoroughly enjoyed" selling off some of the items and was "thrilled with all the results". The wool plush was sold to a UK-based private collector. Other highlights included Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, produced by Dean's Rag Book Co., which was sold for £3, was bought by a Singapore-based collector, who was not put off by minor damage that was caused by Campione's pet rabbit. "I was absolutely delighted to have started the auction off – and although things have changed rather a lot since I was last on the rostrum, I thoroughly enjoyed myself," she said."I was thrilled with all the results, particularly my favourite Peter Rabbit, and amazed that the bids were from as far away as Singapore and the United States."Daniel Agnew, Special Auction Services' toy, doll and teddy bear expert, said the auction was "the most fun I have had in an auction for years".He added: "Bunny taking the first part of her lots was highly entertaining. We achieved some amazing prices and it was a pleasure to find homes for her collection." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Greece's tiny Island of Outcasts charmed me – I'd be expelled there any day
Greece's tiny Island of Outcasts charmed me – I'd be expelled there any day

The Independent

time3 hours ago

  • The Independent

Greece's tiny Island of Outcasts charmed me – I'd be expelled there any day

The sea slaps at the sides of the multicoloured fishing boats as fishermen mend their nets on the dock and a young boy pulls platinum-scaled fish out of the water on a handline. Watching the scene from a suntrap table at a waterside café in Agia Marina, the capital of Leros, I can't understand how this Greek island could ever have been known as the 'Isle of Outcasts' or the 'Island of the Damned'. A quick skim of the history books reveals that Leros was the second most bombed Yet, aside from an immaculately kept war cemetery, a small military museum, and the remains of a couple of crumbling gun batteries and an acoustic military mirror on the west coast, there are no signs of the island's tumultuous past here today. Just a 90-minute ferry ride from busier, better-known Kos, Leros is one of the most laid-back Greek islands I've experienced. Hunkered around a ferry port barely larger than the average back garden, Agia Marina is a huddle of independent linen, ceramic and jewellery boutiques, private studio apartments and traditional tavernas and gyros eateries. There's a twin set of bakeries, too, where the specialities are Lerian cheese pies, made with feta, pastry and a dusting of cinnamon. Service in Agia Marina is uniformly and happily unhurried. One afternoon at Ta Kroupia grill, I lose two hours to a languorous lunch of baked feta – which comes to the table sizzling – fresh tzatziki, pillowy pitta bread and a couple of glasses of chilled white wine, as locals pick at plates of Leros's signature salted mackerel dish around me. There are some distinctive bars in the Lerian capital, too. In Diamanti Cafe, Singer sewing machine stands replace tables and a pet parrot called Coffii bombards bar staff with Greek obscenities. Meltimi, meanwhile, looks more antiques emporium than bar, thanks to its nautical décor. Agia Marina's statement sight is the Castle of Pandeli. Capping a clifftop, 150 metres above the town, its history burrows back to Byzantine times, when it was built on the site of an Athens-esque acropolis. It's possible to drive up to the summit, but I walk, climbing the 500-step switchback path that ascends from the village of Platanos, a short stroll from Agia Marina's waterfront. Wide-screen views over both the east and west coasts of the island open up at every turn. As well as the castle, Leros' other emblems are its windmills. Positioned in a pageant line on the hillside above the fishing village of Panteli, on Leros' east coast, these jam jar-shaped structures were used for grinding wheat and barley into flour in the 18th century, like those on better-known Mykonos. Today, they've been restored and repurposed. One now harbours a cocktail bar called Harris where an al fresco terrace peers out over Panteli harbour and the multi blue hue of the Aegean Sea beyond. The coast of Leros is brush-stroked with beaches. A 35-minute walk from Agia Marina, Alinda is the longest. The waters here make cut crystal look cloudy, and the smooth pebble sand is overlooked by traditional tavernas. At Argo taverna, I find a table in the shade of a tamarisk tree and eat a lunch of keftedes (Greek meatballs) to the soundtrack of softly breaking waves and joyful conversation. Despite being less than 30 square miles in size, Leros has both a brewery and a winery. Raven Brewing's pale ales are served in bars across the island. Isichi Ampelones winery, meanwhile, is open for tours and tastings in summer. Sequestered away in the brush-stubbled hills in the northeast of the island, it's an oasis of a place. Tastings take place on a vine-curtained terrace and are accompanied by Greek nibbles of olives and cheeses. A red wine made from mandilaria grapes, with a nose of fireside smoke and cocoa, is a highlight for me. I clunk away from my visit, lumbered with multiple bottles to take home. I round off my time on Leros with a visit to Lakki. As one of the largest natural harbours in the Mediterranean, Lakki Bay caught the eye of Mussolini in the 1920s when Leros was under Italian rule. With his sights set on turning the area into the 'Corregidor of the Mediterranean' (or a key defensive point for controlling the eastern Med) the dictator commissioned his architects to build a new model town in the Italian rationalism/rationalist style. The afterimage of Mussolini's grand plans can still be seen today in Lakki's architecture, which is more faded South Beach Miami than Greek island.

CRAIG BROWN: Acropolis now - off the beaten track in Greece
CRAIG BROWN: Acropolis now - off the beaten track in Greece

Daily Mail​

time9 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

CRAIG BROWN: Acropolis now - off the beaten track in Greece

Your unmissable, essential Guide To The Greek Islands of ancient myth. KIOSK Measuring 3ft 6in by 7ft, Kiosk is the smallest of the Greek Isles, but comes surprisingly well-stocked with street maps, cigarettes, magazines and cheaper items of confectionery. The perfect holiday destination for those who prefer to stay in one place, and ideal, too, for those looking to buy British Sunday newspapers on the following Thursday. IKEA A range of hotels recently opened on the popular Isle of Ikea. 'It's a whole new concept in luxury accommodation, designed for guests in search of something that little bit different,' boasts the brochure. On arrival, guests are awarded a free set of Allen keys to help them assemble their bed, chair, table and shower curtains. Explanatory diagrams, complete with arrows pointing in all directions, are provided free of charge. The island of Ikea offers plenty of useful activities, from pick-your-own-fruit farms to restaurants in which customers are given coal and matches, a string of sausages and easy-to-assemble cooking utensils. Those wishing to embark on a sunset cruise around the bay may hire transport, but remember to allow two-to-three hours to inflate your lilo. TYPOS 'Welmoce To Typos Airpot' reads the banner that greets tourists. Well-placed signs direct visitors to Car Prak, Trans, Currants Exchang, Lungage Pig-Up and Dirty Free. There's plenty to do on the island, including water-spots, hopping and crazy glof. Hellcopter rides are heavily boked. Typos is an isle of cotnrasts, with indrustial cities to the nroth, and rolling pills to the south. Luxury accomodation is provided by the Majestic, a five-rats muxury hotel. PARANOIA With its palm trees regularly swaying a full 180 degrees in the wind and its waves offering a once-in-a-lifetime experience to the unwary bather, the sun-drenched Isle of Paranoia is a must for those craving adventure. Be sure to drive your hire car at breakneck speed along the famously zig-zagging northern cliff route. The highways agency has thoughtfully placed irregular gaps in the clifftop barriers for those who wish to edge that little bit closer to catch sight of the sea crashing on to the rocks below. The Isle of Paranoia is self-governed by the military, which enforces strict codes of behaviour. Shorts are to be worn only by those under six years of age; seniors apprehended in shorts and/or baseball caps will find themselves enjoying six hours in the picturesque stocks adjacent to the famous tomato market. Important note for all tourists: two exit gates are to be found in the Paranoia Airport arrivals, letting visitors decide for themselves whether to go through Something To Declare or Something To Hide. PATHOS How many of these have you spotted so far? Six must-see sights on Pathos: 1) A one-eyed, three-legged dog called Lucky. 2) Liz Truss, complaining that Donald Trump still hasn't returned her call. 3) A clown fighting back tears. 4) A visitor centre, closed for the holidays. 5) A town crier who has lost his voice. 6) Liz Truss, boasting loudly over a tumbler of retsina that Rudy Giuliani has asked her to make herself available for dinner in November, on the off-chance that Huw Edwards can't make it. ATMOS The historic market town of Atmos prides itself on its multi-storey car park, statue of a 19th-century deputy mayor in a suit and tie, and a shopping mall boasting H&M, Gap, JD Sports and Walmart. The town's three-star Hotel Reasonable offers a lunchtime buffet of food left over from the previous night's dinner, but with added parsley. On no account miss the annual Neil Sedaka festival, this year hosted by Rylan Clark.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store