She's one of the breakout stars from this year's fashion season.
And Iris Law was in attendance at the Loewe Womenswear Spring/Summer 2022 show during Paris Fashion Week on Friday.
The model, 20, certainly turned heads as she rocked up in a mauve knitted cut-out sweater featuring a blue leather bustier.
She layered the edgy number beneath an unmissable yellow leather body harness and completed her ensemble with a pair of baggy denim jeans.
The daughter of Jude Law strutted her way through the French capital in a pair of black trainers featuring silver studs and enhanced her natural beauty with a light touch of make-up.
Her bleached buzzcut stood her out from the crowd as she swept past onlookers during her very own street-side runway show.
Sadie Frost's offspring debuted her striking hairdo cut back in July.
At the time, the beauty discussed with Vogue how she had shaved her head for her role as Soo Catwoman in the upcoming series, Pistol.
She said: 'I wanted to do something that felt liberating. The day I shaved my head, I changed my life. I've never done anything like that before.
'I looked in the mirror and thought it was going to be emotional but it wasn't. It felt so positive.'
Her first runway appearance was at Paris Fashion Week in 2019 for Miu Miu, part of the fashion house Prada.
Last year, Iris discussed growing up with famous parents and how she is managing with her newly found fame in an interview with ES Magazine.
She said her parents, who divorced following six years of marriage in 2003, had given her normality in her childhood despite their A-list status.
Iris explained: 'My dad was really young. He'd had all his kids [with Frost] by 30. Mum, too. She also had a baby face.
'I can never tell [her age] in pictures, I'll say, "What, you had three kids by that age?" She looks 17.'
Recalling her own memories of that time eating snacks on Primose Hill, she said: 'My parents weren't rock 'n' roll when I was growing up, they were just my parents.
'Everyone's parents were rock 'n' roll when they were young. That's not a crazy thing.'