The ex-Love Island star, now 29, posted a series of gorgeous photos of herself in scant clothing to Instagram on Wednesday night.

Olivia Bowen posed for steamy photos in a skimpy pink lingerie set, highlighting her great form

Bowen sported a bright pink harness bra with frilled straps and small bows across the chest, which she paired with matching underwear.

Olivia wore her platinum blonde hair in a wavy blunt bob and accentuated her stunning features with a glamorous smokey-eye makeup palette.

She flaunted her intricate tattoos as she posed from every angle in a sizzling video shared on her Stories, revealing her theatre mask thigh inking.

Along with the stunning photos, she wrote: ‘And @bouxavenue has done it again… The Elabelle is my latest favourite set.

‘I have decided to add some colour to my lingerie collection as we go into S/S and I couldn’t feel more happy about it! Make sure you check out the launch of their Neon Brights campaign! #myboux #ad.’

Olivia’s latest post comes after she admitted she felt “failed” after having an epidural during the birth of her son Abel.

The reality TV star, who welcomed her first child with husband Alex in June, stated that if deliveries do not go as planned, “we need to make women feel more powerful.”

She talked about the pressure she put on herself to have a water birth and how she felt ‘disappointed’ when she couldn’t do it.

Olivia spoke candidly about her experience on the Made By Mammas podcast on Saturday.

She told Zoe Hardman and Georgia Dayton: ‘I was really pro no drugs, I really wanted a water birth and I felt I could breath the child out and I think I felt a lot of pressure to do so, not from anyone else just from myself.’

The reality TV star continued: ‘It felt like you’re a woman, you can do this, you were born to do this. And when it turned out, no, I couldn’t do this.

‘I just felt this huge shame around having an epidural, not being able to have a water birth and not being able to push him out just on my own.

‘I felt huge shame, I felt huge disappointment in myself. It just felt like I had failed because everyone had said “oh you’re a woman, you can do this. You are built for this, our bodies are built for it.”

‘No, that’s not the case in every situation. We should start making women feel a bit more, you know, powerful even if they have to choose an option they didn’t want to, essentially in the beginning. But at the end of the day he got here, he got here safely.’