Braless Ella Eyre put on a racy display at the British Vogue and Netflix celebration for the upcoming BAFTA Television Awards at 1 H๏τel Mayfair in London on Thursday.
The singer-songwriter, 30, set pulses racing in a cut-out sheer dress which showed off her cleavage as she stunned on the red carpet inside the event.
She turned heads in the black and white ensemble, flashing her taut abs and snatched waist in the racy garment.
Ella showcased her jaw-dropping figure in the glamorous gown and wrapped a white linen skirt around her waist.
She accessorised her outfit with statement perspex bangles and elevated her frame with black court heels.
In 2023, Ella opened up about how Adele impacted her music career12369869 after an emotional night out.
The songstress admitted that watching Adele perform at the Brit Awards when she was 17-years-old changed her life and inspired her to pursue a career as a pop star.
In an exclusive interview with MailOnline to mark the launch of new wine brand JOY, Ella said: ‘I remember I was at the Brit Awards when Adele sang someone like you.
‘I was videoing it on my Nokia phone and watching all of my friends cry around me. I thought to myself, “I would love to touch people emotionally in this way with something I’ve created” and that’s exactly where my pᴀssion came from.
‘It was just about being inspired by artists around me who had that affect on me and wanting to provide that to people as well.’
Ella is known for her collaboration with Rudimental on their UK number-one single Waiting All Night which won the 2014 Brit Award for British Single of the Year.
Her hit’s include Came Here For Love, We Don’t Have To Take Our Clothes Off and Deep Down.
She also won Best Newcomer at the MOBO awards in 2014 with her gritty soulful voice, following that with Best Female Act last year.
And her career is going from strength to strength, with another album in the pipeline to be released this year.
Speaking more about where her pᴀssion for music comes from, Ella said: ‘As a young person before social media, music was my way of expressing myself. When you are young you go through your first heartbreaks, you make friends and lose friends.
‘Music was a real anecdote to that and healing, either in a sad way or empowering way. I love to dance and sing, even if I wasn’t good at the time, it didn’t matter it encouraged real human behaviours in me. I loved listening to songs with lyrics that really resonated with me.
‘When I realised I could sing and people stopped telling me to shut up that was something I wanted for myself, to make music that made people feel the way that I felt about the music I loved and to feel not alone.’