She’s been keeping busy during the coronavirus lockdown, having recently signed up as an NHS volunteer.
And Rita Ora left little to the imagination as she went braless while taking a break in her garden on Friday.
The Anywhere hitmaker, 29, flaunted her curves on Instagram in a form-fitting lilac top and showcased her impressive art skills in the process.
Rita looked happy and content as she soaked up the sun in her garden, making the most of the fine weather over the Easter weekend.
Opting for comfort, she ditched her bra for the day and covered her modesty with strategically placed pink flower emojis.
She teamed her purple T-shirt with black cycle shorts and a pair of quirky blue and tortoise shell sunglᴀsses.
The Masked Singer judge added a plethora of delicate necklaces and chunky gold hooped earrings to her look.
Meanwhile, she swept her blonde tresses into a ponytail and added a slick of pink lipstick.
Captioning the images in which she showed off her painting of a tree, she penned: ‘Yesterday I sat in the garden and drew a tree and got paint on my face. For the ones who are fortunate enough to really reflect what did you do? happy Friday!’
Rita’s daring display comes hours after she praised her ‘heroic’ mum Vera for inspiring her to become an NHS volunteer during the coronavirus pandemic.
The singer gushed about her proud mum, 56, during an interview on ITV’s This Morning, after Vera revealed she’s returned to work as a psychiatrist and GP during the outbreak.
Rita also told Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford she is glad to see her single How To Be Lonely has become a help to fans in their homes during the lockdown, after they created dance routines from the song on TikTok.
Rita openly shared her pride for her mum as it was revealed she had returned to the NHS frontline to help during the pandemic, and as been supporting her from afar as they isolate in separate homes.
The British hitmaker also confessed she does worry about her mum being so close to the epicentre of the virus, but has been inspired to try and help the nationwide effort as a volunteer.
She said: ‘I think my mum is truly… she thrives off doing her duty, and what made me want to volunteer is that I just found seeing it first hand this is so real that I felt like what could I possibly do?
‘I just think it’s truly heroic, seeing all the doctors on the front line. It goes to show we as a humanity can still come together and be unified, it’s truly truly an amazing time to come out the other end and think we can do this together.’
Rita is just one over 750,000 UK residents who answered the government’s call to sign up as an NHS volunteer, to complete tasks such as the delivery of essential medicine or providing transport for those in need of medical treatment.
Vera also joined her daughter by chatting to Eamonn and Ruth on video link, and explained that she has been specifically working with patients suffering from mental health problems.
She said: ‘I’m working as doctor psychiatrist and I have been working in the NHS for the past 15 years now, so the difference now is due to mᴀssive changes and restructure of the services, I agreed to continue working with mental health service.
‘I was looking after women, pregnant women with mental health problems but now I’m looking after people with mental health problems and COVID-19.’