Brooklyn DeckerSkyler’s character is second-in-command wife to Ramsey, the race car driver.Dennis Quaid), was fully aware that her onscreen pregnancy was generally not representative of the real thing.
“When I put it on [the belly]They said, “OK. We need it thinner. And we need more bronze.” Tan your belly. It has to look perfect,'” the model, then 25, told the Los Angeles Times at the film’s Hollywood premiere, detailing the approach to Skyler’s picture-perfect experience. I was shocked! This isn’t how pregnancy should look. “I’m setting an awful standard for myself.”
But her prosthetic tummy was heavy like all the others, Decker added, because “they wanted the women to have a realistic waddle—truly, that’s what they said: ‘Realistic waddle.'” CelebHomes News was able to get rid of any baby fever with the help of Decker, who said that it had been enough to stop any future attempts at trying. It was really fun to wear the belly and I had fun carrying around the babies, but it was really nice to take the belly off at the end of the day.”
From now on, mom to her son Hank6 and 7 year olds StevieWith husband, a (4) Andy Roddick, Decker has made it clear there’s no airbrushed version of giving birth. She shared a postpartum photo on Instagram in October that she captioned, “This was me 6 years ago. One week after giving birth to my son. It was so bloody. Many bruises. There were many pads and wipes, and plenty of mesh underwear. I felt like a zombie. It was quite shocking, and it wasn’t unusual. But I didn’t prepare for the shock. There wasn’t much information available about childbirth recovery. My girlfriends and I made kits that detailed all of the details.