Georgia May Jagger leaves little to the imagination in a see-through black top and pencil skirt at the Saint Laurent Paris Fashion Week show

Georgia May Jagger ensured she caught the eye of onlookers as she attended the Saint Laurent Womenswear Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show during Paris Fashion Week on Tuesday.

The model, 32, left little to the imagination as she wore a see-through black halter neck top for the occasion.

She wore a black pencil skirt which finished at the knee which she teamed with a brown leather belt at the waist.

The daughter of Sir Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall wore a pair of black leather gloves, while she had on some black tights and a pair of heels in the same colour.

She wore a chunky gold ring necklace and posed confidently at the event.

Georgia May Jagger ensured she caught the eye of onlookers as she attended the Saint Laurent Womenswear Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show during Paris Fashion Week on Tuesday

The model, 32, left little to the imagination as she wore a see-through black halter neck top for the occasion

The model, 32, left little to the imagination as she wore a see-through black halter neck top for the occasion

It comes after it emerged Georgia’s skincare range amassed losses of almost £500,000, according to Daily Mail’s Richard Eden.

Acounts for her business, Catfish Soup Ltd, showed in October last year that the company founded six years ago is still leaking cash.

Creditors are owed almost £1.5million. If it wasn’t for £866,000 owed by debtors, the losses would be much bigger.

Paperwork says Georgia, the company’s sole director, is ‘satisfied she can continue to support the company’.

It comes after her father Sir Mick. 80, hinted that his share of the Rolling Stones’ back catalogue will be given to charity instead of his children.

Rocker Mick said his eight children ‘don’t need $500million (£400m) to live on’, so he has seemingly come up with another way to donate his fortune.

In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, he said leaving the money to charity might ‘do some good in the world’.

The Stones were forced to learn how to handle themselves financially after facing serious problems with ownership rights.

She wore a black pencil skirt which finished at the knee which she teamed with a brown leather belt at the waist

She wore a black pencil skirt which finished at the knee which she teamed with a brown leather belt at the waist

The daughter of Sir Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall wore a pair of black leather gloves, while she had on some black tights and a pair of heels in the same colour

The daughter of Sir Mick Jagger and Jerry Hall wore a pair of black leather gloves, while she had on some black tights and a pair of heels in the same colour

She wore a chunky gold ring necklace and posed confidently at the event

She wore a chunky gold ring necklace and posed confidently at the event

They still don’t own the rights to their catalogue before 1971 – which includes many of their biggest singles such as Satisfaction, Paint it Black and Jumpin Jack Flash.

The band hired accountant Allen Klein to stabilise their finances in the 1960s. Allen had worked with The Beatles and the Kinks and negotiated a lucrative deal for the Stones with Decca but when the partnership ended managed to retain ownership of their catalogue for the years in which he managed them – from 1965 to 1970.

The Stones received millions of pounds in royalties – but not as much as if they’d owned the music outright.

Other music stars have sold the rights to their work in recent years, including Bruce Springsteen, Paul Simon and Sting. No decisions have been taken on the Stones’ catalogue.

It comes after her father Sir Mick, 80, hinted that his share of the Rolling Stones' back catalogue will be given to charity instead of his children (pictured in 2021)

It comes after her father Sir Mick, 80, hinted that his share of the Rolling Stones’ back catalogue will be given to charity instead of his children (pictured in 2021)

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk