Influencer Nara Smith is nothing if not resourceful, revealing the unique way she’s keeping her breastmilk cold this winter.
Smith, 24, shared an Instagram photo of her breastmilk lying in bags outside in the snow on Thursday, February 26, confirming her new storage system was out of necessity.
“Ripped out kitchen. Construction and no access to fridge and freezer = milk in snow,” she wrote, confirming that her and husband Lucky Blue Smith’s latest home renovation caused her to switch up her normal storage situation.
Nara’s quick thinking came one week after she told her followers that the pair’s New England home is undergoing another round of construction following “water damage” from a recent snowstorm.
“POV: You’re in denial about how the house you just renovated is getting ripped apart again,” Nara wrote via Instagram on February 17, alongside a video of her kitchen being stripped down to the bones.
The model, however, had someone to celebrate this month as well. Nara revealed via Instagram on February 22 that she and Lucky, 27, have been married for six years.
“POV: It’s your six-year wedding anniversary. You just had your fourth child and smile at your younger selves not knowing what the future had in store,” Nara captioned a video montage of sweet moments with her husband.
She added the caption, “Feels like yesterday🤍.”
Nara and Lucky tied the knot in 2020, welcoming their first baby, daughter Rumble Honey, that same year. They went on to welcome son Slim Easy in 2022 and daughter Whimsy Lou in 2024.
The couple announced in June 2025 that they were expecting baby No. 4, Lucky’s fifth, as he is also the father of daughter Gravity, whom he shares with ex-girlfriend Stormi Bree Henley.
Their daughter Fawnie Golden was born in October 2025. “Our little golden girl born on my birthday [was] welcomed to this world by Lucky,” Nara wrote via Instagram at the time. “Her entry into this world was graceful, gentle and oh so magical. Soaking all the love and snuggles!🤍.”
Throughout Nara and Lucky’s marriage — both of whom are models — the mother of four has been dubbed part of the “trad wife” movement.
After posting social media videos that show Nara in the kitchen, glorifying traditional stay-at-home mom duties, sometimes while wearing high-fashion outfits, she became synonymous with the term.
Nara, however, revealed that she and Lucky don’t care about the labels others have pressed upon them.
“I think [people] just project whatever they’re feeling onto us because it might be easier for them,” Nara exclusively told Us Weekly in November 2024. “We just do our thing. And if it resonates, it does. And, if it doesn’t, that’s fine.”
She noted that as a couple, “We really don’t pay too much attention” to what people say about their lifestyle.
Nara Smith, Lucky Blue Smith. Stefania M. D’Alessandro/Getty Images for Gucci
The following year, Nara addressed being labeled as having a “traditional” marriage during a July 2025 episode of the “On Purpose” podcast.
“The other day, someone brought it up to me, and they were like, ‘You have a very traditional way of life.’ I’m like, ‘What do you mean?’” she said. “We split chores. I work. My husband works. We have children. We split everything. I cook because I love to, not because I have to. Lucky cleans. There was nothing traditional.”
Nara continued, “And then they were like, ‘Well, you had kids at 19 and you got married at 18.’ And I was like, ‘And?’ And they’re like, ‘That’s traditional.’ And I’m like, ‘Oh, I guess that’s traditional then.’”
The influencer explained, “It never even crossed my mind because I’ve always been such a believer in having people make their own choices and never judging someone else based on how they choose to live their life and much rather celebrating them. … It was such a foreign concept to me that people would have a negative opinion on me choosing to start my life in that way, early on.”
Nara reiterated, “There’s nothing truly traditional about us as a couple, apart from maybe that we chose to have kids young and get married young. But apart from that, we split chores 50/50.”
She pointed out that Lucky does things that “traditional men wouldn’t do” as well, like the dishes or getting the kids dressed.
“And there’s things that I do, like having a full-time career and having Lucky be home watching the children while I travel for two weeks. Which is, I guess, not traditional in their mind,” Nara said, noting she can’t win with the public.
Nara concluded: “I’m not perfect. I’m nowhere near perfect. No one is. No one is perfect, regardless of how high of a pedestal we put people on.”

