Candace Cameron Bure is brushing off the body-shamers and doing it with flair.
The Full House alum, 49, glowed in a minimal white crop top and breezy drawstring pants in a mirror selfie shared via her Instagram Stories on Tuesday, September 9, proving she’s not about to let anyone else define her style or dim her shine.
With one hand in her pocket and the other holding her phone, Cameron Bure flashed a smile while getting back to business and sharing her outfit details.
She posed in the Artfish Women Casual Basic Sleeveless High Neck Rib-Knit Y2k Crop Tank Top for $15, Angie Crop Wide Leg Pant from Splendid for $110 to $158 and TKEES’ Gemma style in suede with braided straps for $95, completing her look with simple accessories.
Cameron Bure also beamed while rocking the Cher Mini Skort ($98) and Cher Cardigan ($128) from Show Me Your Mumu in another fashionable snap, as well as their Stay Awhile Sweater ($158).
Just last week, Cameron Bure candidly shared that she pulled down a swimsuit photo after being subjected to judgmental remarks about her body — while simply sharing a moment from her relaxing day by the ocean.
“I was at the beach, [and] I was wearing a one-piece,” Cameron Bure wrote via her Stories on September 6. “I am soaking up the end of summer. I was having fun. It wasn’t about my bathing suit or my body, but the comments became flooded with people discussing my body.”
Cameron Bure ultimately decided it “wasn’t worth it” so she deleted the photo.
The Hallmark movie star previously opened up about her battle with an eating disorder as a teenager, and how being in the limelight impacted her body image.
“I developed an eating disorder when I was 18,” Cameron Bure said on a July episode of her eponymous podcast. “It was binging and purging, like, I’m a bulimic. I still say I’m a bulimic because the thoughts, whether I’m doing that or not, never leave me.”
The actress praised her retired hockey player husband, Valeri Bure, for being an “incredible support” system, adding, “I feel, like, a broken record. I’m 49 years old, and I’m, like, ‘Why do I think about this so much? Why does it even matter so much? It’s so ridiculous.’”
“There’s certainly been amazing things and tools that have helped me along the way, but there’s still nothing that has really changed my heart and soul on it,” Cameron Bure continued. “I still constantly think about it. … It’s really vulnerable, but so many of us feel the same feelings.”