Taylor Swift flaunts her endless pins in flirty skirt as she heads to the studio

The Blank Space hitmaker showed off her best assets in a sweet brown chord buttoned skirt and matching brown heeled boots

Leggy Tay heads to the studio

Pop princess Taylor Swift may not be a Victoria's Secret model (yet), but we'd argue she has the best pair of pins on the planet.

The blonde-haired songstress flaunted her endless limbs on a trip to the studio on Tuesday.

The Blank Space hitmaker showed off her best assets in a sweet brown chord buttoned skirt and matching brown heeled boots.

The tanned star teamed her brown bottom half with a navy blue crew neck tee, and carried a vibrant red handbag on her arm.


Splash
Nice to meet you, where have you been?

The Shake It Off star wore a slick of bright red lippy to match her arm candy, and wore her hair down in a sleek blowdry.

The stunning singer was all smiles as she made her way into the recording studio, clutching the back of her skirt to protect her modesty.


FameFlynet
I can show you incredible things

Tay Tay's outing comes days after the savvy singer trademarked a number of lyrics from her songs.

Lyrics the star has penned, including: "nice to meet you, where you been", "party like it's 1989", "this sick beat" and "we never go out of style" have all been trademarked by the star.

It's thought this should prohibit anyone else making any money off the talented singer by selling merchandise with her name on.

Tay Tay's  name, signature and initials (?!) have also be trademarked.

The country singer submitted her requests on 24 and 25 October 2014 - days before her album was released.


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Magic, madness, heaven

As well as forbidding any of these to be printed on t-shirts, bags etc, the star has also requested her branding is not printed on soap, napkin rings and "whips, harness and saddlery."

Now that's what we call savvy.

Speaking last year, Taylor said: "Music is art, and art is important and rare. Important, rare things are valuable.

"Valuable things should be paid for. It's my opinion that music should not be free, and my prediction is that individual artists and their labels will someday decide what an album's price point is.

"I hope they don't underestimate themselves or undervalue their art."

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