Abbey Clancy's little sister is teen model at 13
Filed under: Celebrity News
PA
The high fashion magazine's website's introductory image shows two models kissing, one bare breasted and one dressed.
In one of the photos of Elle taken by Tim Walker for the magazine, the youngster is seen wearing an armoured headdress and giving plenty of teen attitude to the camera. In another, she goes bare-faced and pouting.
In the accompanying interview with LOVE, Elle says that "long hair, Justin Bieber and hanging out with friends" are her favourite things, whilst Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is one of her favourite models, and that she loves her "gorgeous niece Sophia" - Abbey and England footballer Peter Crouch's baby daughter!
Proud Abbey has been supporting her sister's modelling dream for a while, posting a pic of her on Twitter back in the summer and writing: "How gorge is my little sis Elle model in the making xxx." Today big sis posted saying her sister's shoot was "sensational".
Abbey was a runner up on Britain's Next Top Model in 2006, whilst her cousin Chloe Cummings appeared on the show in 2009 - wonder if young Elle is planning to appear, making it a hat-trick of Clancys on the programme?
Do you think Elle is too young to be entering the modelling industry?
- It's so unfair<p> Used by girls aged 13 - 18 to describe almost anything - from having to get up in the morning to being asked by a teacher to unroll their school skirt to mid-thigh. Usually muttered under the breath when the offending adult is out of earshot.</p>

- When's tea?<p> Usually a very important question asked <a href="http://www.parentdish.co.uk/2011/07/11/surviving-teenagers-or-why-boys-eat-so-much/" target="_blank">repeatedly</a> throughout the afternoon from around 2pm onwards.</p>

- I ran out of credit<p> What teenagers say when you haven't been able to get hold of them all evening, even though they promised to stay in touch. Loosely interchangeable with 'I couldn't get a signal.'</p>

- I'm doing it<p> Standard response to any practical request, like "Could you get everything off the <a href="http://www.parentdish.co.uk/2011/09/05/surviving-teenagers-or-what-the-neighbours-saw/" target="_blank">floor</a> in your room so I can hoover it?". Always completely inaccurate description of what's actually going on (because he or she is, in fact, texting/watching TV/catching up on Facebook).</p>


- Can I have £10?<p> Why? Who knows. You have become a hole in the wall: as the parent of a teenager, that's your job.</p>

- Can you pick me up?<p> All teenagers know that their parents secretly want second jobs as taxi drivers. They do their very best to help them practise.</p>

- Don't worry<p> <span style="font-size: 10pt; line-height: 12pt; ">General response to any nervous parent asking for more information about an all-night party/bad exam result/lost house keys/late coursework. Guaranteed to make any panicky adult <a href="http://www.parentdish.co.uk/2011/10/31/surviving-teenagers-worrying-if-they-ll-ever-get-jobs/" target="_blank">worry</a> even more.</span></p>




















