TikTok stars Nara and Lucky Blue Smith are expanding their family.

“Our little surprise🥹🤍,” Nara, 23, and Lucky, 27, wrote in a joint Sunday, June 8, Instagram post.

In the video, Lucky threw his arm around his wife as she lifted up her shirt to unveil a growing baby bump. He leaned down to give Nara’s stomach a kiss in another clip.

Nara and Lucky tied the knot in 2020. The pair are parents to daughter Rumble Honey, son Slim Easy, and daughter Whismy Lou, born in 2020, 2022 and 2024, respectively. (Lucky also welcomed daughter Gravity in 2017 with ex-girlfriend Stormi Bree Henley.)

Related: TikToker Nara Smith and Lucky Blue Smith Are ‘Absolutely Done’ Having Kids 

Nara Smith/YouTube TikTok star Nara Smith and her husband, Lucky Blue Smith, are not looking to have six children as they initially hoped. “After Whimsy, we are absolutely done now,” Nara, 22, told GQ Hype in a profile published on Wednesday, August 7. “Having toddlers is the best sort of birth control because they’re wild.” […]

Following the birth of their youngest daughter, the duo shared that they were done adding to their brood.

“After Whimsy, we are absolutely done now,” Nara told GQ Hype in 2024. “Having toddlers is the best sort of birth control because they’re wild.”

Nara shared that she always had a desire to have children at a young age.

“Lucky had Gravity when he was really young. It felt like a natural thing, ‘Yeah, I think I’m ready to have kids,’” she told the outlet. “When I’m 40, they’ll be 20, and we’ll grow up together. I want to build my life with them rather than trying to integrate them into my life later and it worked out great. I love being a young mom.”

Nara, a model and has amassed more than 11 million followers on TikTok, has offered fans glimpses of her life with Lucky via social media with her cooking videos — and went on to become the center of the app’s “trad wives” niche. (The aesthetic rejects the perspective of modern feminism and glorifies the “traditional” duties of a submissive housewife and stay-at-home mom.)

“What people think online is that we have housekeepers and cleaners and nannies and all of these things, when in reality it’s just me and Lucky wanting a family and sharing our lives online,” Nara told GQ. “In no way am I saying this is normal or this is something people have to do in order to be a certain way.”

She continued, “Whether it’s a meal idea, or a home-cooked meal I’ve made my toddler, or my soothing voice, or whatever it is, I just put content out there to inspire people. Everyone can take whatever they want from my content.”

While reflecting on the outside noise, Nara exclusively told Us Weekly in November 2024 that the pair are not too concerned.

“I think [people] just project whatever they’re feeling onto us because it might be easier for them,” Nara shared at the time. “We just do our thing. And if it resonates, it does. And, if it doesn’t, that’s fine.”

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