Coronation Street favourite Mollie Gallagher added more than a little blonde to her striking gothic style and quickly found out it was a winner.
The actress, Nina Lucas on the ITV soap, is usually all black on top - but now she's made a big change.
Mollie decided the time was right after years of wanting to try something new so over the weekend she cracked open the hair dye - and the results speak for themselves.
She hinted that a total blonde transformation is still on her mind, but with her fringe first she really looks the part.
"Been saying I want all blonde hair for like 5 years or summat and this is as far as I’ve got lol" she wrote on Instagram.
Wearing a statement pink coat and with inch-perfect make-up, the mirror selfie went down a storm.
Her followers on the platform urged her to go the whole way.
One told her: "Go for full blonde Mollie."
Another said: "Absolutely Stunning Mollie and love your hair, make up and your coat."
A third fan told her: "You look lovely it really suits you even if you havent finished yet :)."
Last week, she looked worlds away from her on-screen character as she ditched her heavy make-up.
She went slap free in her Stories, showing off her flawless skin and natural, light brows while she ditched her character's curls with her jet black locks.
The 24-year-old was sharing with her thousands of followers how she struggles to concentrate when other people are speaking as well as forgetting what she was saying halfway through a sentence.
The soap star wrote over the series of clips: "This is me during many conversations," before she is heard saying: "I'm just going about my day and the next minute... I've literally just forgot what I was going to say."
The actress then explained how she covered for losing her train of thought, adding: "It mustn't have been anything important."
She then shared a video of her looking around while Billie Eilish's Happier Than Ever song played underneath with the lyrics "I don't relate to you," which is being used in a viral TikTok trend.
Mollie captioned it: "Me when ppl talk for ages forgetting what they're on about or getting their words mixed up."