Angelina Jolie and Kids
Angelina Jolie and her three kids visited a flea market in Pasadena on Sunday. Pictured: Jolie with her kids attend the “First They Killed My Father” New York premiere at DGA Theater on Sept. 14, 2017 in New York City. Getty Images/Dia Dipasupil

Angelina Jolie recently took her kids, Shiloh, Knox and Vivienne, shopping at a flea market in Pasadena.

The 42-year-old actress was photographed wearing a black dress, gray sweater and gray hat while walking around the market. Shiloh, 11, was photographed wearing a gray hoodie and khaki cargo pants. She was also munching on chips. Knox, 9, was wearing a navy blue shirt and black pants. He was holding a bottle of water. In another photo, the “Maleficent” star is seen walking with twins Knox and Vivienne. The latter was wearing a white long-sleeved polo shirt and camouflage khaki pants.

Before leaving the flea market, Jolie held a plastic bag filled with some of the things they bought. Knox also carried what looked like a toy airplane.

The family’s sighting came after Jolie penned an op-ed piece for The Guardian. The article, which was co-written by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, centered on how the organization can be a leader in ending gender-based violence.

“Despite being prohibited by international law, sexual violence continues to be employed as a tactic of war in numerous conflicts from Myanmar to Ukraine to Syria to Somalia. It includes mass rape, gang rape, sexual slavery, and rape as a form of torture, ethnic cleansing and terrorism. It accounts in large part for why it is often more dangerous to be a woman in a warzone today than it is to be a soldier,” she wrote.

The actress concluded her op-ed piece with a reminder of how NATO could help women in need when it comes to sexual and other forms of abuse. She dubbed the organization as a “shield against aggression and the fear of aggression.”

Meanwhile, Jolie has always been vocal about the issues she’s most passionate about. Earlier this year, she also wrote an article for The New York Times and said that refugee policy should be based on facts, not fear.

“We all want to keep our country safe. So we must look to the sources of the terrorist threat – to the conflicts that give space and oxygen to groups like the Islamic State, and the despair and lawlessness on which they feed,” she wrote.