Tamera Mowry Bra Size and Measurements

Short Bio

Tamera Mowry has a fabulous body. View her bra size, weight, height, and more!

Darvette married Fox News Correspondent Adam Housley. They had in courtship for almost six years by the time they got married.

Tamera Mowry is an American actress and model best known for role as Tamera Campbell on the ABC/WB sitcom Sister, Sister alongside her identical twin sister Tia Mowry. She played Dr. Kayla Thornton in the medical TV series, Strong Medicine. She was born Tamera Darvette Mowry on July 6, 1978, two minutes before her twin sister, Tia Mowry-Hardrict, in Gelnhausen, Hesse, Germany. Her father, Timothy Mowry, is of English descent and her mother, Darlene Mowry, is of Bahamian descent. She married her boyfriend of 6 years Fox News Correspondent Adam Housley on May 15, 2011. They have two children; son, Aden, and daughter, Ariah.

Body Statistics Table

Tamera Mowry's body statistics are seen in the table below. Take a look at measurements like height and weight!

Body Measurements
Height1.65 m, 5'4" (feet & inches)
Weight55 kg, 121 pounds
Cup Size (US)Cup Size B
Bra Size (US)32B
Implants or Natural (Breasts)N/A
Breasts-Waist-Hips34-26-34 inches (86-66-86 cm)
Shoe Size (US)6
Body ShapeN/A
Dress Size (US)6

Tamera Mowry Inspirational Quotes

"Love is love, and a lot of times, people might be in the situation they're in because they put barriers up. Like, some people only want to date a model or an actor or an athlete. You're only limiting yourself. Open up to what's out there because God made us all."

Tamera Mowry

"I want to create my own charity, getting inner-city kids to read more. And I want to produce my own films."

Tamera Mowry

"My mom is a beautiful black woman, and my dad is an amazing white man, and I grew up seeing a family."

Tamera Mowry

"Becoming a mom has really thrown me for a loop. I figured I had this job in the bag because I took care of my brother and my nephew. No way!"

Tamera Mowry

"I honestly realized that my dad was white when someone told me in middle school. They're like, 'Oh your dad's white?' I'm like, 'Oh, my gosh, he really is white.' I knew what race was, but it didn't matter to me."

Tamera Mowry