Roxy Jacenko showed off her extravagant $15,000 Christmas decorations as she got into the festive spirit this week.
The PR mogul, 44, took to Instagram on Tuesday to show her fans the custom fairy lights she had installed outside her lavish Singapore mansion.
Roxy, who splits her time between Sydney and Singapore after moving to the Asian city-state with her husband Oliver Curtis last year, has lined the entire front of her house with floor-to-ceiling twinkling fairy lights.
The exterior of her sprawling Sentosa Island home is entirely light up by the 11-metre curtain of lights, adding a further luxurious touch to the property for the festive period.
She employed Australian lighting company Mr & Mrs Hill to install the decorations, sparing no expense on her festive display.
‘There’s nothing extra about me. @mrandmrshill_ and we are done with this year’s Christmas light install,’ Roxy penned in a caption.

Roxy Jacenko showed off her very extravagant $15,000 Christmas decorations as she got into the festive spirit this week

The PR mogul, 44, took to Instagram on Tuesday to show her fans the custom fairy lights she has had installed outside her lavish Singapore mansion
Roxy’s mansion lies on Sentosa Cove, which is often referred to as ‘Millionaires’ Row’ and features a range of luxury properties, many of which are valued upwards of $25million.
The Jacenko project marks Mr & Mrs Hill’s first ever international installation and they collaborate with a local electrical company.
Speaking to Daily Mail Australia, co-founder Cassandra Hill revealed the installation was valued at $15,000 and took two days to install.
‘Roxy’s Christmas installation was a special project for us, it marked our first international install and a full-circle moment, as Roxy was actually our very first Christmas lighting client four years ago,’ she said.
‘For this project, we worked remotely from Australia to design the concept. Roxy shared images and basic measurements of her home, and we developed a custom lighting design.
‘Once finalised, we had the products flown to Singapore, and a local electrical team carried out the installation under our guidance.
‘The centerpiece of the display is 11-metre custom curtain lights, which required a cherry picker for anchoring.
‘The entire installation took two days to complete, with delays due to the wet weather Singapore is known for this time of year.’

The exterior of her sprawling Sentosa Island home was entirely light up by 11-metre custom curtain lights as she added a luxurious touch to the property for the festive period


Her festive lighting at the mansion marks Aussie lighting firm Mr & Mrs Hill’s first international installation and they worked with a local electric company to help pull off Roxy’s dream

Speaking to Daily Mail Australia, co-founder Cassandra Hill revealed the light installation was valued at an impressive $15,000 and took two whole days to install in a mammoth task
Roxy and Oliver relocated to Singapore with daughter Pixie, 13, and son Hunter, 10 from Sydney last year.
At the time, the businesswoman admitted she found it ‘refreshing’ that nobody knew who she was in Singapore.
‘No one knows me there, no one has any preconceived idea of who or what I am, no one has any expectation, and best of all, no one actually cares!’ she told the Sydney Morning Herald of the move at the time.
‘In Singapore it was a matter of “Roxy who?” I actually found it really refreshing and a bit liberating.’
They made the move when Oliver got a job in the country, with Roxy then shut down some of her Australian businesses to join him there.
However, she has since returned to Sydney and relaunched Sweaty Betty PR, two years after stepping down as director.
Confirming her return in September, Roxy explained she was not born for ‘housewifery’ and actually finds it much ‘easier’ to run six businesses than have wasted time.
‘I’ve always worked—I know no different—so getting back into it was inevitable,’ she told Daily Mail Australia.

Roxy and her husband Oliver Curtis relocated to Singapore with their two children – daughter Pixie, 13, and son Hunter, 10 – from Sydney last year

However, she has since returned to Sydney because she was not born for ‘housewifery’ and finds it much ‘easier’ to run six businesses. She is pictured with Pixie and Hunter
‘I tried to retire, but I was bored! I’m an entrepreneur—it’s in my blood so staying home and taking up tennis and long lunches was never going to last!
‘I travel back to Sydney twice a month. Being 7 hours away and only a 3 hour time difference it’s super easy for me and also so nice to spend time with my mother Doreen and friends, as well as be back in an office environment.’
Roxy went on to say that even when she did retire from being a PR representative, she was still running her digital agency The Ministry of Talent.
‘[I] look after some of the country’s best digital influencers, but by 2pm my day is done. My friends and I joke that I do in an a couple of hours what many would do in a day, so going back to PR means I’m back to being challenged and working 24/7,’ she added.
‘I get a rush doing it. It’s not for everyone but it works for me… it’s fulfilling! Suppose it’s like my hobby!’
She said she commends stay-at-home mothers because she tried it for six months and ‘f**k me that would have to be the hardest job’.
‘There’s f**king nothing to do here (in Singapore), nothing. Housewifery is not for me. Like, let’s be real. I have shopped to the point where I can’t shop anymore,’ she told The Sunday Telegraph.
‘Yes, Ministry of Talent ticks along and I work on that every day, but it’s not enough.
‘I’ve still got too much time in the day, and there’s only so many hours that Chanel, Louis Vuitton and Prada are open.’
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .