Planning baby number two! Married At First Sight stars Cameron Merchant and Jules Robinson show off their matching pregnancy bumps
Jules Robinson announced she was pregnant with her first child back with husband Cameron Merchant back in April.
But on Saturday the Married At First Sight couple joked about expecting baby number two, carried by none other than the former cricket player, 36.
On Instagram, the mother-to-be, 38, posed in a dressing gown with ‘mama’ embroidered on the side.
That’s different! Married At First Sight stars Cameron Merchant and Jules Robinson (both pictured) showed off their matching pregnancy bumps in an Instagram image on Saturday
In the next photo, Cameron donned the same ensemble, and he seemingly stuffed a pillow down the front to appear pregnant.
Jules hilariously cradled the pillow-bump in the picture, just as Cam had done moments earlier.
It comes after the redheaded beauty explained isolation felt just like they were back on Married At First Sight.
Cute! The Married At First Sight couple joked about expecting baby number two, carried by none other than the former cricket player, 36
‘We just felt like we were back in the experiment again, actually,’ the 38-year-old reality told the Healthy-ish podcast on Friday.
She added: ‘We were back in MAFS. I mean, if we did it once, we could do it again because you’re 24/7 with someone for three months on the show, so we were like “we’ve got this”.’
Jules went on to reveal she went into isolation earlier than the rest of the country due to health fears during her first pregnancy.
‘It was a pretty traumatic time’: Jules revealed on Saturday that lockdown with her husband Cam felt like they were back on Married At First Sight
Honest: ‘We were back in MAFS. I mean, if we did it once, we could do it again because you’re 24/7 with someone for three months on the show, so we were like “we’ve got this”,’ the 38-year-old reality told the Healthy-ish podcast on Friday
But she felt as though she had ‘too much knowledge’ by having the news on 24/7 during those earlier weeks.
One news story that particularly sparked fear for Jules was seeing people in New York not being able to be with partners during childbirth.
‘It was a pretty traumatic time, and that’s when we learnt to just not have too much information. Put the news on once a day and that’s enough to know what’s going on,’ Jules said.
Finding a balance: But she felt as though she had ‘too much knowledge’ by having the news on 24/7 during those earlier weeks