She’s known for her chic red carpet looks.
But on Friday, Selena Gomez proved her casual wear game is also on point, with the 27-year-old snapped out with a friend in West Hollywood grabbing a matcha drink.
The Same Old Love songstress cut a laid back yet elegant figure for the outing, in a black tee and jeans, adding a touch of class with her maroon alligator skin handbag and a whole lot of cuteness with her adorable white poodle under her arm.
Jeans, t-shirt and a hot bag: Selena Gomez was snapped out with a friend in West Hollywood on Friday, cutting a casual figure
Gomez appeared virtually makeup free for the excursion, with her hair in a messy ponytail held together with a polka-dotted black and white scrunchie.
Selena wore wedge sandals that matched her purse, and similarly colored Wayfarer sunshades.
Her friend was twinning the star, also in jeans and a black top, but it was a tank instead of a t-shirt.
At one point, the Dead Don’t Die actress lent her sunglasses to her friend as they sipped their green drinks.
The girls were matcha-ing: Gomez was in a simple black tee and jeans, adding a touch of class with her maroon alligator skin handbag and a whole lot of cuteness with her adorable white poodle under her arm
The Texas native is executive producing an upcoming indie romantic comedy, The Broken Heart Gallery, which is currently filming in New York and Toronto.
The film stars Suki Waterhouse, Dacre Montgomery of Stranger Things, and Broadway legend Bernadette Peters.
According to the film’s IMDb page, the film follows a brokenhearted museum curator who starts collecting items connected to break-ups and heartbreak.
Sidewalk chit chat: Selena wore wedge sandals that matched her purse, and similarly colored Wayfarer sunshades
Previously, Gomez successfully exec produced The Wizards Return: Alex vs. Alex in 2013, which was a TV film based off the series which first made her famous, Wizards of Waverly Place on the Disney Channel.
She went on to co-executive produce the wildly popular Netflix series 13 Reasons Why, as well as the TV docuseries Living Undocumented.
Up next for her as executive producer is the series Rising, about a girl in a low-income Latino neighborhood who strives for greatness.
Enterprising woman: The Texas native is executive producing an upcoming indie romantic comedy, The Broken Heart Gallery; here seen at The Dead Don’t Die New York premiere in June