181398_NARS Cosmetics 728 Nail Polish

12.01.2014

Nonie Creme: From Street Kid to Beauty Maven

Nonie Creme: From Street Kid to Beauty Maven
Article Credit: CEW Beauty Insider

Color and trend expert, Nonie Creme, has been a backstage fixture her entire career. She cut her teeth as a session manicurist in London, forging relationships over the years with the world's top fashion designers, photographers, makeup, hair and nail artists. As the Founding Creative Director of Butter London, Nonie was at the helm of product formulation, design and brand development with imaginative techniques, bold graphics and the audacious cheeky humor that made the Butter London range a modern cult classic. Her work in product design and development, color and branding have helped shape the now explosive nail industry, and have made Nonie one-to-watch for seasonal nail and color trends. Here, she shares her start in the beauty biz and the trends she’s seeing for fall. 

I was a troubled kid. I was smart, but I had a chip on my shoulder, and struggled with authority. When I ran away to London in 1994, my parents had enough and cut me off. Talk about tough love.

After a few months, it turned out that my 19-year-old British boyfriend was not going to be a rich and famous rock star. (I know, shocker.) I needed a job, and fast. I had an art degree from a great college…but no one wanted to hire a bratty American kid in Doc Martens. I was alone and scared, and that “shoulder chip” disappeared as I watched my last few pennies drain away.

I have to admit, I’d always really enjoyed painting nails, and it seemed like a fun and easy way to make money, so I went to night school and got certified. Finally, my art education really came into play. I had a natural affinity for color, and could hand-mix nail lacquer shades just by looking at a piece of fabric, a shoe, anything really. People in the fashion and beauty industry loved my “bespoke” nail lacquers, and I started to get calls from top fashion designers asking me to design nail looks for their runway shows and ad campaigns. Editors invited me to weigh in on what I saw happening in beauty and color, and I became a regular expert on the magazine circuit. I used those years to focus on truly understanding the intersection of fashion and beauty, and how color could be used to marry the two. It’s knowledge I used to create the Butter London product range, and now as Founding Creative Director of my next company, Nonie Creme – Colour Prevails, I get the opportunity to use my trend forecasting skills to create new products and colors each season.

So, let’s dive into that!

Fall 2014 is all about the new nude. But before you panic this doesn’t mean you will be wandering around wearing nothing but moisturizer and Chapstick. It’s more about blending and fading certain features, while subtly enhancing others. Features are stained and blurred around the edges, softened and enlarged.

Skin is about invisibility this season. You want it to just…disappear. Using a concealer that truly matches your skin tone, dot and blend in any blemishes, unevenness, dark spots, etc. Then cover everything in sheer matte foundation. Skin should not be a “thing.” There was almost no blush on the runways, but if you feel totally terrified by the concept, run a light bronzer over your whole face with a big, soft brush. No contouring, cheaters!

Next, you’ll want to choose a feature to play with. Eyes? Lips? Brows? Pick just ONE, and go subtle on everything else. For example, if you’re going for a lip, you might want to use a soft pink pearl on your eye lids, a tiny touch of mascara, and a little black eye liner only on your inner waterline, then go for a big, stained berry or wine lip that comes right out to the edge of the lips. Apply lip stain more heavily right in the center of your lips, creating a lust-worthy pout.

Brows are huge in every sense of the word. Let’s blame Cara Delevingne. Personally, I am cursed with patchy brows from my over-plucking punk days, but a little brown pencil, and I’m back in the brow game. Pencil in your brows one shade lighter than you think - strong brows mean Brooke Shields, not Frida Kahlo….Use a clear brow gel to rough up brows and make them “messy.”

Eyes this season are easier than ever to do well. Soft metallics are the order of the day, and although we are talking fall, there is a strong trend for pastels. Try a wash of metallic shadow or powder over your entire eyelid, and around your under-eye as well, then go back in with a good, smudgy black liner and heavily line your upper and inner waterlines. Next, gently rub your eyes, (like you’re tired), and behold your new “I woke up like this” sexy eye. Add a heavy dose of black mascara on upper lashes only.

Whatever you wear this fall, make it feel like you. Add your twist or favorite technique to the mix. Make up should enhance your beauty, not hide your lovely face!

XOXO Nonie Creme

7.31.2014

Beauty Box Subscriptions: Secrets to Success! - Beauty Launchpad

Beauty Box Subscriptions: Secrets to Success! - Beauty Launchpad



Beauty Box Subscriptions: Secrets to Success!

7.12.2013

New Indie Hair Care, #verycool

Indie Hair's branding and package design combines pop-art brights, graffiti-inspired graphics and social media elements.
 

Indie Hair's 'Try Me' kit.

Indie Hair has come up with a creative way to attract fans on social media – and engage a younger generation of consumers. The brand includes a hashtag symbol in all of its product names.

Indie Hair is a new hair care brand launched earlier this year by Scruples, a family-owned professional hair care company that sells its products at salons. The line includes seven hair care and styling products, and two new products are scheduled to launch in Fall 2013.

Indie Hair’s bright, eye-catching design, and over-sized logo, helps to set it apart from other hair styling products. And the social media elements that are integrated into its packaging design are helping to attract an online community of fans.

A Street-Art Inspired Look

Indie Hair's styling and hair care products are packaged in cans, bottles and jars, all of which are either plastic or metalized. Day-glow neon caps, and a puffy logo that looks like it could've been spray-painted onto the packaging's industrial silver finish, come together to create its eye-catching look.

"The Indie Hair logo and branding is very much tied to the world of street art or 'tagging' as we like to refer to it," explains Mia Liguori McHugh, co-president of creative for Scruples. She continues, "The look is effortlessly fresh, attention-getting and all about expressing who you are as an artist – whether it be hair, fashion, or music."

The vibrantly colored caps and dispensing closures are the packages' stand-out features. They're reminiscent of pop-art brights, in orange, yellow, blue, pink purple and green.
"The bold colors are representative of the trend of individuality, however, they also grab your attention on a store shelf," says McHugh.

Named for Social Interaction


It couldn't be any simpler for consumers to find and interact with the brand on all types of social media sites, since Indie Hair's product names were created with Twitter users in mind.

"After noticing how Twitter savvy our demographic was, we decided to also integrate the hashtag symbol as part of our packaging and product names," explains Tracy Liguori, co-president of marketing for Scruples.

She says, "Our target customers are between the ages of 18 – 30, male and female, hairdressers and consumers who want the freedom to be different by mixing products to customize their individual look."

Each Indie Hair product has a name with a hashtag, plus a description of the product's benefit.

The product lineup includes: #superfirm hairspray; #mixitstrong gel; #mixitsoft polish; #wreckit putty - clay; #round2 powder; #cleansweep shampoo_bodywash; and #untangled conditioner.


Indie Hair uses hashtags in all its product names.
The brand also uses QR codes on some of its packaging, with the fun message, "scan for a good time." 
 
"We use QR codes on the boot and boxes of our "try-me" kits and stylist kits. They are also on our brochures and flyers. They take the users to a very fun Indie Hair video on our You Tube channel," says Liguori.



Gaining Followers, Fast
Indie Hair's strategy seems to be working, the brand says. "As predicted, our product hashtags have taken on a life of their own on Twitter and Pinterest - but surprisingly, we've been even more popular on Instagram," says Liguori. 



She adds, "We've had a significant following increase on all those social media platforms, as well as on Facebook, and we continue to gain new users every day."

Indie Hair is also planning more ways to further engage its social media community. The brand will give away 20 ipad minis in November, to the winners of its online styling contest that begins July 1. More details will be explained on the brand's page at Facebook/MyIndieHair.


By Marie Redding, Associate Editor of Beauty Packaging Magazine

2.24.2013

Hello derma e!

If you haven't yet heard of derma e® skincare, here's your chance!

The line is highly natural and loaded with healthy vitamins and antioxidants. It's a best seller at Whole Foods, Sprouts and other natural health stores. 

derma e® essentially pioneered the use of Vitamin E in topical skincare. Since then, it's introduced over 80 products enriched with skin-improving ingredients like Vitamin A, C-Ester,  Glycolic Acid, Astaxanthin, Pycnogenol, DMAE, Alpha Lipoic and Tripeptides. 

Like many women, you may have in the past liked the idea of buying natural skincare only to be dissappointed in the lack of efficacy or lousy aesthetics. Luckily, the folks at derma e® took that into consideration, and it really shows. They've won more awards over the years than any other natural skincare brand!

Here are some of their products...

NEW! Evenly Radiant BB Creme, key ingredient: Plant Stem Cells
NEW! Skin, Hair and Nail Oil, key ingredients: Argan Oil, Jojoba Oil, Kukui Oil


Evenly Radiant Dark Circle Eye Creme, key ingredient: Plant Stem Cells


Soothing Cleanser, key ingredient: Pycnogenol



Very Clear Spot Treatment, key ingredients: Tea Tree and Willow Bark

Firming Moisturizer, key ingredients: DMAE, Alpha Lipoic Acid, C-Ester

Age-Defying Night Creme, key ingredients: Astaxanthin and Pycnogenol


I love that the brand makes a stance to formulate products that are 100% vegan, GMO-free, paraben-free and SLS free in packaging that's 100% recylcable. Plus, they operate using 100% wind energy in sunny Southern California.

If you visit this link on their website (dermae.com), you can get a 10-piece sampler set for FREE (only pay S/H).  What are you waiting for??

1.10.2013

It's Here! JNolicious Jewelry!

So in my never-ending quest to make the world a more beautiful place, I started making jewelry by hand. I love finding random things, like scrap beads, fabric, metal and charms, then putting them together in unexpected ways. As such, most of my pieces are one-of-a-kind show-stopping statements --  just like the women I make them for. 

I started gifting my jewelry to family and friends over the holidays. I can humbly say that the response has been overwhelming, so I've become less shy about 'going public,' er, selling my accouterments to the world. 

Here's a peak at just a few of the items in my online boutique, JNolicious Things on etsy.com. Please browse, buy, and check back often for more bedazzling baubles! 

















11.28.2012

L'Oréal to Acquire Urban Decay

A product from Urban Decay's Build Your Own Palette.
Photo By Courtesy of Urban Decay

L’Oréal Paris said Monday it has signed an agreement with private equity firm Castanea Partners to acquire Urban Decay. 

Based in Newport Beach, Calif., Urban Decay executives will report to Carol Hamilton, president of L’Oréal Luxe USA in New York. Hamilton praised Urban Decay as “experts in being able to appeal to younger consumers with the right presentation and the right products.”

She also cited the makeup-driven company’s expertise in navigating what she described as “the newest form of luxury distribution” — specialty chains like Sephora and Ulta. 

Wende Zomnir, the makeup expert who created the brand in 1996, said the core consumer is aged 28 to 29 years old, but the audience ranges up to age 40, running the gamut from “edgy girls to people who have kids and jobs and are looking for formulas.”

Zomnir will continue as general manager of worldwide strategic brand development and creative director. Her current title is chief creative officer. 

Nicolas Hieronimus, president of L’Oréal Luxe in Paris, said, “Urban Decay will beautifully complement L’Oréal Luxe’s portfolio of iconic brands. It is the makeup specialist we needed to fully satisfy young women in search of playful colors and inspiration in selective distribution, at an accessible price point. It is totally additional to our existing propositions and as such it will contribute significantly to the growth of the division in the years to come,” he added.

Urban Decay recorded net sales of $130 million in the fiscal year ended in June. L’Oréal did not disclose the sales price. However, industry sources estimate that the price climbed as high as $350 million. 

The brand is known for its vibrant shadows and pencils in the brand-leading eye category and has been branching out into complexion and primer products. This fall, the company transformed its Naked color cosmetics franchise into a new line, called Naked Skin, focusing on complexion and providing an entrée into foundation. Chief executive officer Tim Warner said the sell-through was above expectation. Instead of achieving a penetration of 8 to 9 percent, Naked Skin surged to a penetration of 15 to 16 percent. L’Oréal noted that specialist brands account for 44 percent of the luxury makeup market in the United States. In addition to chains like Ulta and Sephora, Urban Decay also distributes through Web sites like urbandecay.com and sephora.com.

“L’Oréal’s strong innovation capabilities and presence in every channel of distribution will enable Urban Decay to reach its full potential in the marketplace,” stated Warner. The acquisition is subject to regulatory approval, which is expected by the end of the year.


By  and  for WWD

10.18.2012

Liz Goldwyn and MAC Cosmetics Team Up for Holiday

Products from MAC's Fabulousness holiday collection.
Photo By Courtesy of MAC

Los Angeles-based artist, filmmaker and fashion muse Liz Goldwyn has teamed with MAC Cosmetics to create makeup bags as part of its holiday collection, Fabulousness. On sale in MAC stores Oct. 25 to Dec. 20, the three-piece range includes a brush bag, an evening-style clutch and a hanging bag packaged with various MAC products and palettes inspired by Goldwyn’s trademark vintage style. 
Liz Goldwyn
Photo By Donato Sardella

For Goldwyn, the granddaughter of movie-studio founder Samuel L. Goldwyn and actress Frances Howard, Hollywood glamour runs in her blood. She is also a lingerie expert, having created a book and an HBO documentary on burlesque, both called “Pretty Things.” 

For MAC, which supported “Pretty Things” in 2005 by creating the makeup look for Goldwyn and the other performers in the film’s finale, she was a natural choice to create lingerie-inspired accessories — the company’s first foray into bags. 

“I was looking for the perfect makeup bag with a classic boudoir look when I saw John Demsey [group president of MAC’s parent, the Estée Lauder Cos. Inc.] during Oscar week in 2011. I asked him why they weren’t making any, and he said, ‘Why don’t you do it?’” recalled Goldwyn.

She used a pair of vintage leopard-print panties, plus laces and nets from her own collection, as the inspiration for the bags, which feature pastel satin exteriors covered in leopard-print plastic and matching interiors lined with lace-print plastic. “I like that good-bad duality, and they’re both pretty and durable. I travel constantly and have been road-testing them for nine months,” said Goldwyn, whose signature adorns the “L Goldwyn for MAC” labels. 

Goldwyn, who once worked for Shiseido, has several high-end fashion projects under her belt, including a jewelry line bearing her name that sold at Barneys New York, Collette and Joyce, and one for a high jeweler whose name she can’t divulge. 

“What I love about this project is that it allows me to design something that’s beautiful and accessible,” she said of the bags, which range from $39.50 to $49.50 at retail, including the brushes, eye and lip products that come in the smaller bags.

Goldwyn is also designing screen printed T-shirts and hoodies for skate brand Altamont that hit stores next month. The graphics are inspired by pin-up girl art, although Goldwyn said she doesn’t mind “if some teenage guys just think it’s old and cool-looking.” 

Looking ahead, Goldwyn is also adapting “Pretty Things” into a musical, beginning preproduction of a biographical documentary filmed abroad, and hoping to design her own line of fashion stockings and tights with a vintage flair, of course. 

She noted, “I like the idea that you can infiltrate the masses but put a piece of education or history on it.”


By MARCY MEDINA for WWD

10.17.2012

Target + Neiman Marcus, A Match Made in Holiday Heaven

 

If you watched any TV yesterday chances are you saw something about the Target + Neiman Marcus Holiday Collection.  I couldn't be more excited for this legendary partnership launching December 1st in both Target and Neiman Marcus stores nationwide (and online of course!)

The list of illustrious designer partnerships is impressive: 

Target + Neiman Marcus Holiday Designer Collaboratives

Alice + Olivia, Altazurra, Band of Outsiders, Brian Atwood, Carolina Herrera, Derek Lam, Diane von Furstenberg, Eddie Borgo, Jason Wu, Judith Leiber, Lela Rose, Marc Jacobs, Marchesa, Oscar de la Renta, Philip Crangi, Prabal Gurung, Proenza Schouler, rag & bone, Robert Rodriguez, Rodarte, Skaist-Taylor, Thom Browne, Tory Burch and Tracy Reese.

Today Target.com launched its preview - click and you can see ALL of the items and pricing!  Check out the exclusive items - after all, it's never too early to start building their (and your) Christmas list.  There are more than 50 gorgeous gifts, from apparel and home decor to pet products and sporting goods; and they're all sure to sell out fast! 
 

Gifts in the Target + Neiman Marcus Gift Collection

You can also follow @ABullseyeViewOpens in new window and @NeimanMarcusOpens in new window (#Holiday24) for updates.

10.15.2012

Santa Monica Art Studios: Open Studio Exhibit

This weekend I had the opportunity to visit the Santa Monica Art Studios located in an historic 22,000 square foot hangar at Santa Monica Airport. For Directors Yossi Govrin and Sherry Frumkin, this event marked the 8th Anniversary Celebration of resident artist studios and exhibition space.


More than 36 painters, printmakers, photographers, sculptors and mixed media artists opened their studios for the event.


Here are some snaps of my favorites pieces and sights from the exhibit. I encourage you to click on the artists' names above to learn more about them and view more of their work. 

Sculptures by Yossi Govrin 




 Paintings by Pamela Simon-Jensen, Acrylic on Canvas




Painting by Janet Bothne, Mixed Media on Canvas, 64" X 38"  



Painting by Lauren Chase





Metal Sculptures by Maddy le Mel






Wire Habillment Sculptures by Amy Jean Boebel  



Wall Hangings by Dodi Silver Simons  




Paintings by Eric Oliver 





Reclaimed Jewelry by Paula Rosen 







Figure drawings by Melinda Smith Altshuler, 
oil stick, oil paint, 
pages from BOOK OF WORLD INFORMATION on building paper, 63" x 36" each


Installation by Melinda Smith Altshuler



Bench by Melinda Smith Altshuler