Georgia May Ayeesha Jagger (born 12 January 1992) is an English fashion model.
I like to do a face steam, so, heat up a flannel, press it onto your face and then press a cold one on afterwards to close the pores. It's inexpensive!
When I was about 12 and first started wearing lipstick, my dad would ask, 'Are you wearing makeup?' I would say back, 'You're wearing more makeup there than I am!
I didn't want to miss out on my education to model. I can't do just modeling.
I wear a lot of the boys jewelry - the chains as well - so it's kind of good for my style because I like wearing chunky jewelry.
Material Girl is about having your own personal style, and my personal style reflects the brand's aesthetic.
My dad has more sparkly stuff than most men.
Drink lots of water, get lots of sleep, and take vitamin C!
I think when your parents are as rebellious as mine were, it's difficult to top them. So what's the point?
I think if everyone looked the same, it would be a bit boring.
I have a coconut oil stick, which I use for everything - on my eye lids to make them shinier, on my lips, and on any dry skin.
I'd love to do a fashion label in the future. I've been thinking a lot recently about maybe making a line of little dresses, so maybe one day.
Basically, my hair is very dry from all the backcombing! Hairdressers prefer if your hair is dry and damaged, as it makes it easier to style.
I love to shop vintage clothes; in London, I usually go to Relic and Alfie's Market. I usually brunch around London Bridge, where I live.
My friends call me George, GM, or Georgia. But most people who know me from when I was little call me Georgia May.
I really like doing portraits, but I like taking pictures of things that are natural, like scenery, too.
I used to have a pony but I outgrew it and I do dream that one day I will live in the country and have lots of horses and be like a proper English lady who goes hunting and everything.
Fake tan is really difficult to get right. When I was younger, I'd always do it wrong. I'd leave it on and forget to wash it off. So I embrace being pale. I like getting a tan, but I also think that if you're going to do it, it has to be gradual. I just work the pale thing now.
Even when my parents were together, they both had to travel and work, and it wasn't like they had nine-to-five jobs. In that way, it wasn't a normal family life.
My problem is that I always find jeans that are either high-waisted or low-rise, but nothing in between, like they used to be in the eighties and early nineties. That's actually the most flattering cut.
I still think of my mum as being kind of a dork - a cooler one, but still a dork.