Cara Delevingne has revealed that she's already in the habit of buying clothes for her future child.
In a new interview with Harper's Bazaar UK, the 29-year-old model revealed that she recently invested in some baby clothes as she's "manifesting" her child.
"I want to have babies," she told the publication. "But not yet. I buy children's clothes for my future child who doesn't exist."
She added: "Baby shoes really get me – they break my heart. I went shopping the other day and I bought these tiny Air Jordans, which are purple and they have a lion on them. I'm manifesting."
Delevingne, who identifies as pansexual, also spoke about coming to terms with her sexuality as a teenager, revealing that the lack of LGBT+ role models she saw growing up had an adverse effect on her.
"I do think I would have hated myself less, I would have not been so ashamed, if I'd had someone," she said. "The one thing I’m happy about growing up queer and fighting it and hiding it is it gives me so much fire and drive to try to make people’s lives easier in some way by talking about it."
The model also spoke about some of her past relationships, with the likes of actor Ashley Benson and musician St Vincent (whose real name is Annie Clark), which have been highly publicized.
"When you have a relationship, there’s definitely an element of it being exposed, especially with coming out and being in public relationships, like when I was with Annie," Delevingne said.
"But now I really value my privacy so much, so no one can put their ideas and comments on it."
It comes after Cara said that her sisters "did their best to be there" for her as she admitted "growing up as a queer child was isolating and hard to navigate at times".
She said she saw her sisters Chloe, 37, and Poppy, 35, as the "epitome of the woman I wanted to be".
"I saw my sisters as the epitome of the woman I wanted to be. I soon realized that I couldn't be the same - all of us have different paths - but they showed me the most fundamental things that I had to learn in life," she recently told The Sunday Times.
She went on: "Growing up as a queer child was isolating and hard to navigate at times. My sisters did their best to be there for me but it was something I had to go through myself to truly know who I was.
"I'm still on that journey and will continue to be for the rest of my life."