logo
Who is Victoria Beckham's younger lookalike sister Louise Adams? She once ran a clothes shop where Brooklyn Beckham worked, and her ex-husband is a convicted criminal

Who is Victoria Beckham's younger lookalike sister Louise Adams? She once ran a clothes shop where Brooklyn Beckham worked, and her ex-husband is a convicted criminal

Victoria Beckham has always made it clear that family comes first in her life – whether it's her supportive hubby and four children or her parents.
Louise Adams at Victoria Beckham's big 50th birthday bash in 2024. Photo: @louisesadams/Instagram
When the Spice Girl threw a big 50th birthday bash last year, guests included
Tom Cruise , Eva Longoria, Salma Hayek, and the pop girl group's entire line-up – Mel C, Mel B, Emma Bunton and Geri Halliwell, per Vogue UK. But there was one less familiar figure among the star-studded mix, Louise Adams, who's known Posh for longer than the rest of them – she is her younger sister, after all.
Advertisement
Louise Adams (left) is Victoria Beckham's younger sister. Photo: @louisesadams/Instagram
Adams is rarely spotted in the public eye, but when she does put in an appearance, people often comment on the similarities between her and her famous sibling.
Here's what we know about the Louise Adams:
Louise Adams' background
Louise Adams with her parents Tony and Jackie Adams. Photo: @louisesadams/Instagram
Victoria Beckham is the eldest of three siblings, including her sister Louise Adams and her brother Christian, per Life & Style. Their parents are Jacqueline Adams (née Cannon), who reportedly worked as an insurance clerk and hairdresser, and electronics engineer Anthony Adams. Per People, Jacqueline and Anthony raised their children in Goffs Oak, Hertfordshire in the UK.
As documented in Netflix's Beckham, it seems Victoria enjoyed a comfortable upbringing – we all remember the famous line about her being driven to school in a Rolls-Royce – so it's likely her siblings did too. Per People, her parents' electrical supplies company benefited from the 1980s tech boom.
What does Victoria Beckham's sister Louise Adams do?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Van Morrison talks about his new album, an excess of songs, and his Covid backlash
Van Morrison talks about his new album, an excess of songs, and his Covid backlash

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

Van Morrison talks about his new album, an excess of songs, and his Covid backlash

Few musicians are so productive in their old age. For quite some time now, Van Morrison – now 79 years old – has brought out a new album every year, and now he has a problem that other recording artists would envy: too much material. Advertisement The restless Belfast belter of soulful stream-of-consciousness has recorded so much music that he has a backlog of songs waiting to be released. 'There are new arrangements and projects that have just been sitting there gathering dust,' Morrison says in an interview published on his website. 'Distribution can only deal with so much at a time. It'd be difficult to get out two records a year. One is manageable.' With his latest album, Remembering Now, Van Morrison is tackling some of the backlog with songs he recorded years ago. One is the moody opening number 'Down to Joy', which film buffs should recognise as the Oscar-nominated track from the 2021 film Belfast by Kenneth Branagh.

Anna Jewsbury, creative director of Completedworks, on jewellery design, what inspires her, and the ethos behind the brand whose fans include Emma Watson, Keira Knightley and Saoirse Ronan
Anna Jewsbury, creative director of Completedworks, on jewellery design, what inspires her, and the ethos behind the brand whose fans include Emma Watson, Keira Knightley and Saoirse Ronan

South China Morning Post

time3 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Anna Jewsbury, creative director of Completedworks, on jewellery design, what inspires her, and the ethos behind the brand whose fans include Emma Watson, Keira Knightley and Saoirse Ronan

Guests knew they were in for a treat when they walked into Senate House – the imposing academic building in London's leafy Bloomsbury neighbourhood – ahead of Completedworks' fashion week show. The mystery performance teased in invitations manifested as a dark comedy by playwright Laura Waldron, starring American actress Debi Mazar as Julia, a QVC-style presenter who yo-yos between her droll on-screen persona and a frenetic, but relatably human, inner monologue. Alongside Mazar's anguished performance, magnified in several TV screens positioned around the set, the brand's autumn/winter 2025 jewels shone, replete with signature pearls and candy-like ruby red gems. Completedworks' Anna Jewsbury doesn't have technical training – but you wouldn't know it from her creative pieces. Photo: Handout Advertisement A play doesn't strike one as the arena of choice for jewellery brands, but Completedworks, and its British-Filipina creative director Anna Jewsbury, has never been known to play by the book. Founded in 2013, the brand is loved among a knowing fashion set and British A-listers (think actresses Emma Watson , Saoirse Ronan and Keira Knightley) for its elegantly off-kilter designs, which sit comfortably at an affordable luxury price point. Style spoke to Jewsbury on the sidelines of the show. How did you rationalise staging a play, instead of presenting the pieces for people to look at up-close? It's quite nice to try and do something a little bit different for fashion week, because I feel like people really expect a static installation, but there's something so special about a live performance. I think what's nice is that the show is one part of the Completedworks' world, and it definitely serves to build an aesthetic and also a point of view. Building this personality through the show feels worthwhile, and maybe there's a bit of wanting to be contrary and go a bit against the grain in doing something that isn't expected of a jewellery brand. Completedworks earrings. Photo: Handout Did you always want to go into jewellery? I don't know if it was that pre-planned, but ever since I was a child, I always loved jewellery and beautiful objects. I never studied jewellery – I studied maths and philosophy – and what I love about those two subjects is that there's this real mix of precision and creativity. You're trying to understand the world, and I think you can apply that to what I'm doing now. When I'm designing, I have questions in my mind and am pulling together lots of different references to find the pieces that we make in response. As someone without technical training, how do you approach the design process?

Touch Roman pottery and Elton John's tunic at London museum site that's like an Ikea store
Touch Roman pottery and Elton John's tunic at London museum site that's like an Ikea store

South China Morning Post

time4 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Touch Roman pottery and Elton John's tunic at London museum site that's like an Ikea store

A museum is like an iceberg. Most of it is out of sight. Only a fraction of their items are on display, with the rest locked away in storage. But not at the new V&A East Storehouse, where London's Victoria and Albert Museum has opened up its storerooms for visitors to view – and in many cases touch – the items within. The 16,000 square metre (170,000 sq ft) building, bigger than 30 basketball courts, holds more than 250,000 objects, 350,000 books and 1,000 archives. Wandering its huge, three-storey collections hall feels like a trip to Ikea, but with treasures at every turn. V&A East Storehouse senior curator Georgia Haseldine among some of the thousands of items on display at the new London venue. Photo: AP The V&A is Britain's national museum of design, performance and applied arts, and the storehouse holds aisle after aisle of open shelves lined with everything from ancient Egyptian shoes to Roman pottery, ancient Indian sculptures, Japanese armour, modernist furniture, a Piaggio scooter and a brightly painted dustbin from the Glastonbury Festival.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store