We’re seeing triple!
Jessica Alba’s two daughters re-wore her dresses from 2010 to join her for a screening of her new movie, “Trigger Warning,” in Los Angeles earlier this month.
Honor, 16, and Haven “Havie,” 12, walked the red carpet with the actress, 43, who shares both girls and son Hayes, 7, with her husband, Cash Warren.
Honor dazzled in a green gingham sleeveless minidress with a deep-V neckline and puffed skirt, which Alba wore to the London premiere of “Valentine’s Day.”
Honor paired the Prada garment with black closed-toe heels, layered necklaces with a large cross pendant and a bold red lip.
The teen parted her blond-highlighted hair down the middle and wore it straight.
Meanwhile, Haven opted for a corseted dark denim mid-length dress, which she accessorized with black platform shoes and gold hoop earrings.
The preteen styled her red tresses in loose waves.
Alba sported the Dolce & Gabbana number while promoting “Good Luck Chuck” at Comic-Con.
“Throwing it back all the way to … ’10 in the sweetest way ever 🥹,” the “Fantastic Four” star captioned her Instagram post commemorating the nostalgic outfits.
“I loooove seeing my girls wear some of my archived pieces and adding their own touch 🫶🏽 #FashionFriday,” she added.
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The mother of three, for her part, donned a black lace corset top and matching palazzo pants as her caramel locks cascaded down her shoulders.
Alba and her eldest seem to be on great terms these days, as the former revealed in 2019 that the pair went to therapy together.
The actress explained at the time that she wanted to “learn to be a better mother to [Honor] and communicate better with her.”
Alba elaborated on the subject earlier this year, sharing that the duo was “arguing all the time about dumb stuff.”
“I was like, ‘I don’t want to live like this.’ I didn’t want us to have a wedge between us,” she told Real Simple magazine in January.
“It’s a process, and I’m not perfect,” the “Sin City” star went on, noting that the sessions helped Honor understand that her mom “was just being a parent.”
At the same time, Alba admitted that counseling “put [her] in check,” too.
Though Haven joined some of the mother-daughter sessions, the Honest Company founder said her girls have since moved on to solo therapy because “they’re older now.”
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