
Shirtless Jack Grealish displays his toned frame in blue board shorts as he enjoys sunny holiday with his girlfriend Sasha Atwood and daughter Mila, ten months
The Manchester City footballer, 29, and the model, 28, recently jetted off to sunnier climes with Jack documenting their holiday on his Instagram page on Friday.
He shared an array of snaps of himself and Sasha doting over their daughter Mila Rose, ten months, who they welcomed into the world on September 27.
In one holiday picture, Jack put his muscular physique on display as he went shirtless in a pair of blue board shorts while topping up his tan.
He sipped on a cold drink while gazing out at the picture-perfect views as he enjoyed some downtime with his family.
They also enjoyed a luxury yacht trip and Jack shared a playful video of himself using the on-board shower as he washed out his dark locks.
In one holiday snap, Jack put his muscular physique on display as he went shirtless in a pair of blue board shorts while using the outdoor shower on board a luxury yacht
The winger also posted an array of photographs of himself cradling baby Mila as he looked every inch the doting father.
Jack and Sasha proudly posed with Mila for one family snap as they dressed up to the nines for a day out during their balmy holiday.
Jack cut a dapper figure in a white shirt and green trousers while Sasha looked effortlessly glamorous in a figure-hugging pastel yellow dress.
In a caption alongside the gallery of photos, Jack gushed: 'Wundaful long needed break with good people. Motivated and ready to go again.' (sic)
Jack has been enjoying an array of fun activities and trips recently, and in the same post, he also shared some photographs from Oasis' Manchester show.
While watching the Heaton Park show, Jack put on a very loved-up display with Sasha as they enjoyed a rare child-free night out after welcoming Mila in September.
Jack cut a casual figure in a white vest and quarter-length jeans while Sasha looked effortlessly stylish in a white lace-up ensemble.
He also posted a photograph with the Gallagher offspring as the group socialised during the gig.
Jack and Sasha also both proudly posed with Mila for one family snap as they dressed up to the nines for a day out during their balmy holiday
He wrapped his arms around Liam Gallagher's sons Lennon, 25, and Gene, 24, who the Oasis star shares with Patsy Kensit and Nicole Appleton respectively.
Jack was also joined by Noel Gallagher's kids - sons Donovan, 17, and Sonny, 15, who the singer shares with Sara McDonald, and daughter Anaïs, 25, whose mother is Meg Mathews.
Noel and Liam are lifelong Manchester City supporters and manager Pep Guardiola also attended one of the Heaton Park shows and met the kids backstage.
Oasis delighted fans by performing in their native Manchester at five sold-out gigs from July 11 to July 20.
And they have now arrived in London and took to the stage at Wembley Stadium on Friday night for their first of seven reunion shows.
It marks the first time that the band have performed at Wembley Stadium since their Dig Out Your Soul tour on July 12, 2009.
The Gallagher clan have been flocking out in London to support Oasis' big comeback, with Anais and her mother Meg both in attendance on Friday night.
Noel's ex-wife Meg, 59, has been steadfastly supporting the singer in the lead-up to the reunion, posting throwback snaps of them to Instagram, and she also attended the first night of the tour in Cardiff.
She once again stepped out to see Oasis perform as she posed with her daughter Anais and her father Stanley Matthews in photographs shared to social media.
In other clips shared to Instagram, Meg filmed herself with a group of pals in the crowd and appeared to be having the time of her life.
Ahead of the gig, Meg reminisced about Oasis's previous London gigs and gushed that Anais - who was seven months old when they last performed - is just as proud of her father now.
She said: 'Reflecting on 25 years ago when @Oasis rocked the stadium with 70,000 fans, and Franny fru fru, Pippy la la, Rose & Ra Ra, @lexyroche made it right to the front barrier don't know how we did it.
'Now gearing up for tonight's show with 90,000 attendees. Time flies, memories remain. Anaïs only 7 months old then to watching her now so proud of her dad , a full circle that was me just 2 years older than nai nai running around.
'Tonight will be a celebration of family and friends, a moment to cherish. Seated this time, but the excitement remains just as strong. Here's to another 25 years of music and memories.'
Oasis' Wembley dates got off to an emotional start as Liam and Noel dedicated their concert to Ozzy Osbourne, who died on Tuesday at the age of 76.
His death came just weeks after he took to the stage for his final show with Black Sabbath, with his family confirming the devastating news.
The Gallagher brothers respectfully honoured the Prince of Darkness by singing Rock 'N' Roll Star in front of a huge image of Ozzy.
In videos shared across social media of the tribute, Liam said: 'Liam said: 'I want to dedicate this next one to Ozzy Osbourne, Rock 'N' Roll Star.'
MailOnline revealed that an air ambulance was called to Ozzy's grand country home as paramedics battled to save his life for two hours.
Friends told the Mail's Alison Boshoff that his heartbroken wife Sharon may bury Ozzy in the gardens of their 350-acre estate in an intimate family funeral, as she is 'too frail' to go through a larger, public service.
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The Independent
26 minutes ago
- The Independent
Transfer news live: Arsenal's Eze bid, Man Utd close on Sesko, Liverpool given boost for Isak move
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Elsewhere, Liverpool have agreed to sell Darwin Nunez to Saudi Arabian club Al Hilal which should open up funds to purchase Isak if they are willing to match Newcastle's valuation and Ruben Dias is close to agreeing a new contract with Manchester City while Nicolas Jackson is set to leave Chelsea this summer. Good morning! Welcome to The Independent's transfer blog. We'll have all the latest comings and goings from the Premier League and more throughout the day. Mike Jones7 August 2025 07:26 Alexander Isak forced to train alone at Newcastle amid Liverpool transfer links Newcastle striker Alexander Isak was told he must train away from the Newcastle squad as uncertainty over his future continues. The 25-year-old Sweden international was told to report for training on Wednesday but only after the rest of the squad had left. 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Scottish Sun
27 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
US journalist who vanished during solo hike in Norway is found ALIVE after ‘spending nearly a week in the wilderness'
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Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Why interior designers are bringing back the Downton-era kitchen
It was Downton Abbey that sparked the current revival in traditional, country-house kitchen design, and as the period drama's grand finale hits cinemas in September, our fascination with 'back of house' kitchenalia continues. Tile-lined larders and housekeeper's windows, cook's tables, glazed cabinets, floor-swishing door curtains, serving hatches, baize doors and even serving hatches are back, bringing an aura of below-stairs Edwardiana to modern kitchens. As Chloe Willis, the associate director of interior-design firm Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler, puts it: 'There's an appealing honesty to the hard-working, back-of-house kitchen where everything looks collected rather than designed. It's a celebration of utility, patina and texture. Everything is in its place… it's orderly, but not minimal.' But it's not all about nostalgia. There are practical reasons for turning back the culinary clock. An antique armoire or robust cook's table is just as useful as fitted MDF joinery or a built-in island, and you can take them with you when you move. A door curtain provides insulation; a cool, slate-lined larder year-round storage. Throw in punchy modern fabrics, vibrant colours and reclaimed materials and you have a kitchen that feels familiar but not frumpy. Here is our pick of the kitchen throwbacks worth investing in. The serving hatch As we fall out of love with open-plan living, separate cooking and dining areas are resurfacing on floor plans. So, too, is the serving hatch. Once a byword for naffness, these nifty portals make sense: you can close the doors for privacy while you're toiling puce-faced over saucepans, and open them – ta-dah! – to pass plates through to expectant guests. For a Gloucestershire barn conversion, designer Amy Dalrymple made a hatch out of reclaimed timber, with folding doors that echo the rustic architecture and a deep shelf for serving plates. And a hatch is not just for dining rooms. Designer Sarah Peake installed a glazed window, set into a bookcase, in one of her projects, which allows her client to keep an eye on the children in the adjacent playroom as she works at her desk in the kitchen. 'It's practical and a fun way of communicating,' says Peake. The cook's table Before the kitchen island, there was the workaday cook's table (think Mrs Patmore kneading the dough). For her London kitchen, designer Sarah Brown eschewed the ubiquitous island in favour of a free-standing piece of furniture from Plain English: 'I call it my chop-and-chat table; I use it for cooking and socialising,' says Brown. The sturdy cook's tables by Wiltshire-based kitchen company Guild Anderson are based on examples at National Trust houses and made using traditional estate joinery techniques, with storage drawers and wooden worktops with marble inserts. Use it for prepping and breadmaking – or working from home. The housekeeper's window (or glazed partition) The Edwardian housekeeper kept a gimlet eye on her underlings through the internal window that separated her office from the kitchen. Today, a glass partition offers both practical and aesthetic appeal. In furniture maker Patrick Williams's Bath home, a screen of handmade 'wibbly' glass masks culinary clutter – the mixer, bowls, storage boxes – from the main kitchen. 'Things can be fairly chaotic, but if you hide them behind a screen, there's an order to them,' says Williams, who runs the interiors practice Berdoulat. In a terraced London house, designer Laura Stephens chose not to knock through the kitchen and family area to create a single open-plan space. Instead, a new internal window above the kitchen sink offers a glimpse into the sitting room at the back. 'I've always loved that historic reference [of a housekeeper's window] – they feel architectural and full of character,' she says. It's also, she notes, a more layered and lasting alternative to open-plan living. The hotplate Synonymous with robust country-house breakfasts ('More kedgeree, madam?'), the hotplate is having a moment. Think of it as the modern incarnation of the 1970s hostess trolley. The sine qua non of food-warming implements – favoured by designers such as Beata Heuman and Sarah Vanrenen – is the claw-footed Wembury Warmer, a 1930s-inspired piece created by interiors stylist Emma Hanbury. Production is currently paused while a new manufacturer is sourced, but you can still join the waiting list. In the meantime, British maker Kaymet offers a palatable alternative with its retro bronze-glass top. The pantry Classical kitchen maker Plain English has transformed the pantry – once a utilitarian store for tins and dry goods – into an object of desire. Today, it's as much about display as storage. Think carefully curated shelves of mugs, jams or cookbooks; freestanding or built-in units that double as stations for coffee makers, toasters or wine fridges, set beneath elegant marble shelves. 'It can be incredibly functional and beautiful,' says Merlin Wright, the design director at Plain English. Where pantries were once lined in plain pine or linoleum, they have since become a canvas for colour and pattern. Interior designer Tiffany Duggan used deep crimson shelves and emerald-and-white tiles to bring joy to a pantry in an Edwardian home. Designer Isabella Worsley gave a seaside pantry flair with blush-pink tiles and walnut shelving edged in brass studs. Lisa Mehydene, the founder of homewares brand Edit 58, indulged her 'back-of-house yearnings' in a compact pantry nook, also by Plain English, in her London kitchen. Walls in Farrow & Ball's St Giles Blue – 'like a burst of summer on a winter morning' – are paired with cheerful Wayne Pate tiles. Beneath the worktop, skirted cubbies house pasta, baking staples and 'grabbable' snacks for the children. 'It works for all of us,' she says. The glazed cabinet Once the pinnacle of dining room elegance, the glass-fronted cabinet fell from grace after years of displaying sporting trophies, porcelain knick-knacks and fussy sherry glasses. Now, says antique cabinet specialist Valerie Perkins, it's time to reassess this maligned classic. Her mainly 19th and early 20th-century pieces – originally made for schools and libraries in oak or mahogany – are beautifully constructed and can be customised with vibrant wallpapers or contrasting paint, inside and out. 'I tell people not to play it safe,' says Perkins, who scours salerooms and markets for the right examples. Some clients build entire kitchens around a cabinet; others top them with deep marble to create bars. 'It's the cherry on the cake – a talking point,' she says. The portière or door curtain Attached to a sturdy curtain rod, a floor-sweeping door curtain adds both insulation and drama. Fabric designer Tori Murphy is a fan of the portière: 'They bring softness and comfort… a sense of cosiness,' she says. And it's not just doors getting the treatment – curtains are creeping beneath worktops and shelves too. They can even serve as a pet-friendly way to disguise a dog or cat basket – ideally in matching fabric, as seen in designer Laura Stephens's co-ordinated home. There are no rules: sturdy wools, practical oilcloths or light cottons will all do the trick. The baize door Traditionally, a door lined in forest-green baize and pinned with brass tacks marked the boundary between the main house and the servants' quarters. It muffled noise, absorbed cooking smells and helped insulate draughty halls. Now, baize is making a quiet return – for more democratic reasons, says designer Octavia Dickinson. 'A baize door offers a sense of quiet separation, but I love using it as a decorative element in its own right.' And it's not all snooker-table green. In her own home, Dickinson chose burgundy on one side of her kitchen door and soft sage on the other. Made from merino wool, the fabric feels 'soft and luxurious', and the studwork, she says, can be applied in 'wonderfully inventive ways'.