Emily Ratajkowski is pregnant! The model, 29, reveals she is expecting her first child

Emily Ratajkowski is pregnant! The model, 29, reveals she is expecting her first child with husband Sebastian Bear-McClard as she shows off her bump

Inamorata founder Emily Ratajkowski has revealed she is pregnant with her first child.

The 29-year-old model shared the happy news with Vogue magazine as she put her bump on display while in a bronze silk and lace negligee.

The I Feel Pretty actress looks to be over six months along; the father is her movie producer husband Sebastian Bear-McClard.

Baby on board! Inamorata founder Emily Ratajkowski has revealed she is pregnant with her first child

Her spouse: The I Feel Pretty actress looks to be over six months along; the father is her movie producer husband Sebastian Bear-McClard. Seen in early October

Her spouse: The I Feel Pretty actress looks to be over six months along; the father is her movie producer husband Sebastian Bear-McClard. Seen in early October 

The star also said she does not yet want to know the gender of the baby in an essay she penned herself.

‘When my husband and I tell friends that I’m pregnant, their first question after “Congratulations” is almost always “Do you know what you want?” We like to respond that we won’t know the gender until our child is 18 and that they’ll let us know then. 

‘Everyone laughs at this. There is a truth to our line, though, one that hints at possibilities that are much more complex than whatever genitalia our child might be born with: the truth that we ultimately have no idea who—rather than what—is growing inside my belly. Who will this person be? 

‘What kind of person will we become parents to? How will they change our lives and who we are? This is a wondrous and terrifying concept, one that renders us both helpless and humbled.’

She added, ‘I like the idea of forcing as few gender stereotypes on my child as possible. But no matter how progressive I may hope to be, I understand the desire to know the gender of our fetus; it feels like the first real opportunity to glimpse who they might be. As my body changes in bizarre and unfamiliar ways, it’s comforting to obtain any information that might make what’s coming feel more real.

‘It occurs to me that as a younger person I’d almost automatically imagined myself having a daughter. I remember playing as a child, holding baby dolls and picturing myself with a future best friend: something like the American Girl doll I owned, who had brown eyes and brown hair to mirror my own features, a smaller version of myself.

‘When I bring this thought to my therapist, she explains that my story is relatively common. Psychology du jour, she says, touts the concept that people may have children to “redo” their own childhood. They want to fix themselves and their traumas by trying again with a fresh start and a mini version of themselves.’