Schapelle Corby unveiled a completely new look on Wednesday as she revealed her stunning hair transformation.
The convicted drug smuggler, 46, who once sported jet black hair and has recently rocked faded brown locks, has now dyed her hair bright red once more.
Taking to Instagram last week, Corby flaunted her shiny new tresses which looked very sleek and long after she took the time to straighten them out.
Corby was all smiles in the footage she shared with her followers as she held her pooch in one arm and showed off her new range of resin clocks.
The redhead has made a new life for herself after her release from an Indonesian prison in 2014, and is now making a living as a successful clockmaker.
Earlier this year, she shared some of her colourful timepieces with her 162,000 followers, which typically retail for around $220.
The clockmaker looked youthful and happy as she let her followers know that smaller versions of her epoxy resin clocks were available.
‘My new small size. Aren’t they cute? Look how cute this is,’ the SAS Australia contestant said as she held an ocean-themed mini-clock up to the camera.
It comes after Corby made a shock admission about her imprisonment in Bali after she was famously incarcerated for nine years for attempting to smuggle in cannabis.
Corby was released from Kerobokan Prison in 2014 and deported from Indonesia in 2017, with many believing she received a lifetime ban from the entering the country.
However, she shocked her Instagram followers when she revealed she was only given a six month ban from the tropical paradise.
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Posting a throwback picture of herself on a Bali beach, Schapelle shared a news quote which said ‘she was given a lifetime ban from Indonesia’.
‘Not true,’ she clarified in her own caption. ‘I was given a 6 month ban.’
She then shared another picture of herself happily drinking on a boat with friends, juxtaposed with an image of herself behind prison bars.
It was here Corby revealed she has ‘no yearning desire to go back’ to Bali after her incarceration, despite being allowed to return.