Naomi Campbell, Michelle Rodriguez and Eiza Gonzalez enjoyed a shopping spree in Ibiza Old Town on Wednesday.
The supermodel, 54, looked effortlessly chic in a pale pink and white summer dress, teamed with sandals.
She hid her eyes behind oversized sunglasses and completed the stunning look with gold jewellery.
Meanwhile Michelle, 45, cut a trendy figure in a white vest top with an eye printed on the front and linen trousers, teamed with sandals and a backward baseball cap.
Eiza, 34, wore a pink floral midi dress for the outing, where the girls shopped in small boutique stores.
The day prior, Naomi, Michelle and Eiza looked on cloud nine as they enjoyed a yacht trip.
Naomi displayed her jaw-dropping figure as she slipped into a brown and white patterned strapless bikini.
The beauty put her hair in a durag as she gave herself a quick shower after going for a dip in the Mediterranean.
Naomi also wore a pair of sunglasses and added to her look with a cream hat as she relaxed on deck with her pals, including film producer Mohammed Al Turki, 38.
The ladies were joined by a group of friends for the yacht trip including Italian model Afef Jnifen who looked incredible as she sunbathed in a red, white and blue bikini.
Mohammed, 38, joined them on the decking after going for a swim. He is a Saudi Arabian film producer behind Arbitrage starring Richard Gere, 99 Homes and Crisis featuring Gary Oldman.
In 2021, he launched the Red Sea Film Festival’s Women in Cinema, an initiative to celebrate inspiring women in the industry.
The outing comes after Naomi revealed that when she was young she faced teasing over her looks from other children at school.
The supermodel admitted that despite finding global fame for her statuesque frame and striking good looks, she hadn’t always felt confident.
Speaking on Cambon Podcast, she explained that kids had poked fun at her height and slender figure, comparing her to the cartoon character from Popeye, Olive Oyl.
Naomi recalled: ‘I wasn’t at ease with myself because I was very skinny and quite tall for my age. And they used to call me Olive Oyl.
‘And, you know, kids call each other names. My neck’s quite long, so I used to try to shrug my neck down so it wouldn’t be so long. I felt awkward.’
The catwalk queen explained that it was through dance that she came to embrace her body.
While learning the rhythmic movements served her well when it came to doing photoshoots, and inspired her poses.
She explained: ‘I just would pose the movements and the poses that I did for dance, and that got me through.
‘And creativity too. It’s something that I loved and yeah, that will never change with me. I feel that’s something that’s really part of my DNA.
‘My mother gave me a few pointers in the hallway of our home when I was a teenager and I remember even the music we were walking to was Lionel Richie and to listen to the rhythm.’
Naomi also discussed the discrimination she faced and proudly declared that she had never been shy about standing up for herself.
She said: ‘I had a voice and I would speak out if there was something that was unfair and not just.
‘Especially if I was working the same hours, doing the same job, but not being paid the same, I will speak about this.’
Her candidness comes as a new exhibit celebrating her life and career has been launched at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
The exhibit has been created to’ celebrate her creative collaborations, activism and far-reaching cultural impact.’
But last week, Naomi declared that out of all her incredible achievements, becoming a mother was the ‘proudest moment’ of her life.
The beauty shocked the world when she announced the surprise birth her daughter in 2021 aged 50 and posed with the newborn on the cover of Vogue, before welcoming a son in 2023.
Appearing on Loose Women on Tuesday, she was asked what the proudest moment of her life was and firmly replied: ‘Definitely becoming a mother, hands down.’
Naomi recently confirmed that she welcomed both her children via surrogate , after previously admitting that her daughter, three, wasn’t adopted.