It's hard to maintain your fashion sense on the red carpet when you're dressing up around an expanding baby bump. But Jessica Alba, 30, who is expecting her second child with hubby Cash Warren, 32, (she's already mom to 2-year-old daughter Honor), has managed to look super chic this summer, stepping out in a slew of bright and breezy looks.
PHOTOS: See Alba's previous maternity style
The actress went for a teal printed Issa maxi dress with butterfly sleeves at the launch of the children's book Carla and Leo's World of Dance in Los Angeles.
She dazzled in a custom Diane von Furstenberg coral and purple color-block dress with Fallon jewels at the CFDA Awards.
For a friend's wedding the Spy Kids 4 star chose a turquoise blue strapless floral dress with cut out detailing paired with metallic Brian Atwood sandals and a white fringed shawl.
Alba told Us Weekly that her current pregnancy has been much easier than the first.
PHOTOS: Who else is expecting in Hollywood?
"It's just simply not as daunting of a process. Before everything was happening for the first time and it's like, 'What's going on?' and 'What does this mean?'" she said. "I would look everything up online, I had all my books; I diagnosed myself with everything that can go wrong. Of course nothing went wrong, thank God! I guess I'm sort of more at ease with it all."
PHOTOS: See Alba's previous maternity style
The actress went for a teal printed Issa maxi dress with butterfly sleeves at the launch of the children's book Carla and Leo's World of Dance in Los Angeles.
She dazzled in a custom Diane von Furstenberg coral and purple color-block dress with Fallon jewels at the CFDA Awards.
For a friend's wedding the Spy Kids 4 star chose a turquoise blue strapless floral dress with cut out detailing paired with metallic Brian Atwood sandals and a white fringed shawl.
Alba told Us Weekly that her current pregnancy has been much easier than the first.
PHOTOS: Who else is expecting in Hollywood?
"It's just simply not as daunting of a process. Before everything was happening for the first time and it's like, 'What's going on?' and 'What does this mean?'" she said. "I would look everything up online, I had all my books; I diagnosed myself with everything that can go wrong. Of course nothing went wrong, thank God! I guess I'm sort of more at ease with it all."