Amber Rose was almost unrecognizable when she posted an Instagram photo wearing a red wig.

A photo posted by Amber Rose (@amberrose) on Apr 17, 2015 at 4:45pm PDT

In one post she pushed the red hair back captioning, "U like?"

Fans replied to the post with mixed emotions. Some liked it and many others voiced that they like her bald signature look better.

@kibilko25 wrote, "Absolutely stunning!"

While @mz.understood13 replied, "...Go back to bald baby girl. Bald is beautiful on you."

Amber Rose posted another photo with the red wig on. This time she wore her hair on her shoulders.

A photo posted by Amber Rose (@amberrose) on Apr 17, 2015 at 9:13pm PDT

She captioned the post, "Jessica Rabbit."

According to E! News, Jessica is Disney's Roger Rabbit's human wife known for her famous line, "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way." She is tall, voluptuous with wide hips and curves, which matches Rose's description as well.

It is not clear if the posts were a new look for the famous star or if she was just trying something fun.

Rose tells E! News that she is not ready to focus on a relationship at the moment. "I just want to focus on my kid and work," she said. "He's big and he's talking. He knows everything. He's so smart. He has full conversations. It will blow your mind."

Rose had more surprises for her followers.

The star also posted a throwback photo of her, where she sports a natural makeup look.

A photo posted by Amber Rose (@amberrose) on Apr 16, 2015 at 12:11pm PDT

She captioned the post, "#tbt Muva at 18 years old when I first cut my hair."

Rose has always been known in the public eye as the girl with the bleached buzz cut except for the one time she dyed it blue recently, MTV noted.

Meanwhile, the star dubbed Muva wrote a book titled "How to be a Bad B*tch" and it has been ready for presale since last month.

A photo posted by Amber Rose (@amberrose) on Apr 3, 2015 at 11:43am PDT

Wiz Khalifa's ex-wife captioned an Instagram post of the book cover, "I'm taking back that word and using it to empower instead of using it as a negative connotation."