The influencer, 30, wore a red dress which featured the number seven on the front and he surname of her partner.
Cristiano, 39, wore the number seven shirt during his first stint at Manchester United and continued the tradition while at Real Madrid and Juventus.
Georgina was also joined by the couple’s children, who sat admiring watching the model strut her stuff on the catwalk.
As the children sat together, the mother was supported by Cristiano Jr, 13, Alana, five, and twins Eva Marie and Mateo, 6.
The couple are parents to both Alana and Bella, 18 months, who was not seen at the show
They tragically lost Bella’s twin brother, Angel, when he died during childbirth in April 2022.
Meanwhile Georgina is step mother to Ronaldo’s other three children Cristiano Jr, Mateo and Eva.
Georgina paid homage to her footballer partner as she donned her bright red flowing floor-length dress which trailed the floor as she walked the runway in the French capital.
Georgina turned around to reveal Cristiano had signed her top with the message: ‘For the love of my life Gio x Vetements. Cristiano Ronaldo’
She completed her look by wearing some black heels which were visible under the dress as she walked.
It comes after Georgina’s curvaceous derriere was censored by a prudish Iranian regime newspaper.
She was pictured in a family photo to celebrate the Portuguese football superstar’s 39th birthday earlier this month.
Georgina was seen wearing a figure-hugging black dress while hugging Ronaldo’s eldest son Cristiano Ronaldo Jr, as the family of six crowd around a birthday cake.
The photo – posted to Ronaldo’s 621 million followers on Instagram – was quickly picked up by news outlets around the world, including the Hamshahri newspaper.
However, rather than printing the original, the Tehran publication blatantly edited the snap so that Rodriguez’s rounded buttocks is nowhere to be seen.
It appears Hamshahri attempted a rough Photoshop job in which Spaniard’s bum looks to have been flattened from her waist to her lower thigh.
Speaking to The Sun, a source said Rodriguez would be ‘very upset’ with the publication’s digital alteration of the photo taken last week.
‘She works hard for her body and is very proud of her curves,’ they said. ‘It just shows the view of women in some parts of the world is twisted. It’s only a bottom.’
After Ronaldo’s move to Saudi Arabian football team Al Nassr, she has taken a more conservative approach when posting to social media in accordance with the Muslim country’s stricter dress codes.
Like Saudi Arabia, Iran also has strict laws governing what women can and cannot wear dictated by the regime in Tehran. Women in the country have to wear a veil and loose-fitting clothes which cover everything but their hands and face.
If they fall foul of these rules, women can face up to 10 years in prison. These draconian laws translate to how women are pictured in the media, and it appears the rules meant the regime couldn’t stand for Rodriguez’s curves being printed in the major national newspaper.