James Oliver has welcomed another child with wife Jools - and it seems bigger broods are better when it comes to celebrity baby trends.

The 41-year-old chef and his other half, who were already parents to Poppy, 14, Daisy, 13, Petal, seven, and Buddy, five, announced the happy news in the early hours of Monday morning.

Jamie was first to share a picture of their son on Instagram and revealed he weighs a healthy 8lbs. Nawww.

Alongside the snap of their bundle of joy swaddled in a blanket, the proud dad gushed: "And then this just happened guys !! IT'S A BABY BOY !! Everyone in the Oliver family is very surprised and beyond happy.

(Image: jamieoliver/instagram)

"He arrived safely, mum /@joolsoliver was really really amazing, unbelievably composed, natural birth and my two eldest girls got to come in at the very end as the baby was born which was amazing to witness very very emotional."

Jamie and his wife are not the only ones who wanted to expand their family, even David Beckham has mentioned he wants another baby.

The footballing legend , who has Brooklyn, 17, Romeo, 13, Cruz, 11, and Harper, four, with wife Victoria previously revealed he wants to add to their family, even though the fashion designer had ruled it out.

(Image: Getty)

He said: "We might have one or two more, you never know. If it happens, great... It's always a thought."

And celebrity families with a large number of children are very popular across the pond, with Kris Jenner's six famous children, and Angeline Jolie and Brad Pitt's six adorable kids.

It was reported recently that the couple, who have three of their own children, and three adopted, are planning to take on another.

(Image: Getty)

Brad, 52, and Angeline, 41, are allegedly confident another child will help strengthen their relationship and put their divorce talks in the past for good.

"Brad and Angelina are putting the wheels in motion to adopt an older child from South Africa, Burundi, or Ethiopia, where Zahara was born," a source told HollywoodLife.com.

"They initially wanted to adopt from a more war-torn region in the Middle East, but the adoption process is much more difficult in those areas."