Paddy and Christine McGuinness pushed the boat out for their 10th wedding anniversary with a romantic meal, flowers and a glamorous photoshoot.
The couple said "I do" on 4 June 2011 and have since had three children together - twins Penelope and Leo, seven, and Felicity, five.
Sharing snaps of a romantic photoshoot to celebrate the big day on Instagram, the model, 33, mused: 'If we have laughter, we have everything' while Paddy joked: 'If you're lucky later I'll make us a brew before bed!'
The couple looked happy and relaxed as they smiled for photographs while striking a number of poses in front of an elaborate flower display and huge lit-up 10 sign.
Holding on to her husband, 47, Christine looked stunning wearing a powder pink dress with thigh-high split, which she teamed with a pair of perspex heels.

Earlier in the day the couple, who have been together for 14 years, posted a photo of them enjoying a romantic meal, which Paddy captioned: "10 years married today!"
Christine, who is one of the stars of reality TV show The Real Housewives of Cheshire recently told Steph's Packed Lunch that her husband wouldn't know it was their anniversary "unless he's watching."
The star revealed that: "We've never had an anniversary together until last year when we were forced to… we've got no romantic plans, I don't know what we'll be doing.

"We tend not to do a lot together, because of our situation at home with the children we don't have help or babysitters… it will probably be a takeaway at home. We're together and everything's going well. It's been 10 long years of marriage!"
Mum-of-three Christine has been courageously candid about what it's like looking after the couple's three children, who are all on the autistic spectrum.
She and Paddy filmed a BBC One documentary earlier in the year about their children's autism after their twins and daughter Felicity were diagnosed.
The couple will meet with other parents who have autistic children, as well as paediatricians and child-development experts to learn more about their children's condition.
Former Take Me Out presenter Paddy recently spoke about filming the documentary on a podcast.
He said: "I felt doing a documentary about the condition and how we deal with things, hopefully people will watch and go 'well, if he's going through that, then I shouldn't be ashamed or worried about getting help in.'
"It's just important as much information you can get out there about anything like that is a help.

"For me as parent who has children with additional needs, you feel, a little bit, that everyone else is having a really good time apart from you.
"When I see other people in the same situation or people, in a weird and perverse way, worse off than you, you kind of feel 'oh, at least I'm not dealing with that.'
"Weirdly it makes them feel a bit better or they're not on your own with this."