Ronnie Wood and wife Sally step out hand-in-hand for lunch

Ronnie Wood and wife Sally looked as loved-up as ever when they were spotted holding hands while in London on Saturday.

The Rolling Stone rocker, 75, and his partner, 45, seemed in high spirits as they left Scott’s in Mayfair after enjoying lunch together.

Musician Ronnie wore a black jacket and jeans of the same color, which he wore with a white shirt with the collar unbuttoned.

He opted for a comfortable pair of sneakers and shielded his eyes behind mirrored sunglasses.

Sally wore a smart but casual ensemble, an ivory white jacket and a brilliant white top.

Out and about: Ronnie Wood, 75, and his wife Sally, 45, looked as loved-up as ever when they were spotted holding hands while in London on Saturday

All smiles: The Rolling Stone rocker and his partner appeared in high spirits as they left Scott’s in Mayfair after enjoying lunch together

In style: Musician Ronnie wore a black jacket and jeans in the same color, which he wore with a white shirt with the collar unbuttoned

She wore blue jeans and a pair of white sneakers, while wearing sunglasses as she enjoyed the warm spring weather.

In 2012, Ronnie married Sally, the owner of a theater production company, 31 years his junior.

Their twins, named Gracie Jane and Alice Rose, were born in May 2016, just before Ronnie Wood’s 69th birthday in June.

Ronnie has four other children – Jesse, 46, with first wife Krissy Findlay, and 44-year-old Leah and Tyrone, 39, with ex-wife Jo. He also adopted Jo’s son Jamie, 48.

It comes after Ronnie revealed that Prince William was so impressed with his charcoal portrait of his grandfather Prince Philip that he keeps it in a “special place where he can see it every day.”

The star snapped a photo of the late king tipping his hat during a parade commemorating the end of a charity run at Buckingham Palace in 2017.

Speaking to the Mail, Ronnie said: ‘I really liked that image when I saw it in the paper. I told William I was genuinely struck by that image… he tips his hat.

“I captured it and [William] loved it. He said, “I’m not going to give it to the queen.” He said, “She can look – but she hasn’t.”

Keep it cool: He opted for a pair of comfortable sneakers and shielded his eyes behind mirrored sunglasses.

Fashion focus: Sally wore a smart yet casual ensemble, dressed in an ivory white jacket and a brilliant white top

Fashion ahead: She wore blue jeans and a pair of white sneakers, while wearing sunglasses as she enjoyed the warm spring weather

Happy couple: . Ronnie married Sally, the owner of a theater production company, 31 years his junior, in 2012

On their way home: The pair were seen together in the back of a black London cab as they left after their meal

“He has it in a special place where he can see it every day,” he said.

William and Kate currently live in Adelaide Cottage in Windsor. It is not clear where the portrait is kept.

Ronnie, who started painting as a child, also revealed that he has a secret stash of sketches of the late Queen.

‘I would have liked to have done that [paint the Queen],’ he said. “I painted her in my spare time and I have some images of her I’ve sat on that aren’t quite right. A difficult thing to pin down. Over the years I have made several sketches.

‘It’s an assignment I would have liked to have done. It’s time. You have to have the person sitting in front of you and the time to dedicate to it.”

Farewell: Ronnie gave a thumbs up as he sat next to Sally in the back of the cab on the return journey

Ronnie spoke ahead of the release of his latest artwork, Stones in Cuba.

The colorful piece, which features the late drummer Charlie Watts playing a Cuban drum, Sir Mick Jagger dancing and bassist Darryl Jones throwing his Fedora, is available for purchase with Wood’s handwritten setlist from the Stones’ historic 2016 free concert in Cuba.

The group performed to more than 500,000 people as part of the largest-ever rock concert in the country, which the government once deemed the group’s music an “ideological deviation.”

Ronnie created the piece at his home in Hertfordshire after waiting for the ‘buzz to settle down’ on his return to the UK.

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