Press "Enter" to skip to content

They Couldn’t Find Beauty Tutorials for Dark Skin. So They Made Their Own | The New York Times

00XP-BLACKBEAUTY-COMBO-superJumbo
The beauty industry often shuts out women with darker complexions, but Nyma Tang, Monica Veloz and Jackie Aina are video bloggers working to change that (Credits From left: Nyma Tang; Juan Veloz; Angela Marklew)

by Sandra E. Garcia via nytimes.com

Women are not born knowing how to do a flawless cat eye or a shadowy, smoky eye, so they often turn to makeup tutorials on YouTube. A search for “smoky eye” pulls up endless videos showing how to perfectly blend eye shadows to achieve the look.

Simple.

But what if you had dark skin and most of the videos showed lighter-skinned women applying hues that would make you look as if you had a black eye? What if you couldn’t relate to these women, because you couldn’t see yourself in them?

The answer to that is also simple: You make your own YouTube channel.

That is what Jackie Aina, 31, Monica Veloz, 26, and Nyma Tang, 27, did. The three women collectively have nearly four million YouTube subscribers, with Ms. Aina alone having over two million.

The women, all self-taught, turn on their cameras at home, and show us how to put on foundation, apply lashes and highlight our cheekbones, step by step. They teach us what tools to use and which hair products work.

“I think everyone looks for someone that looks like them,” Ms. Tang said. “I was definitely looking for that, especially on YouTube, and it was hard to find tutorials on products for women with deeper skin.”

The beauty bloggers provide darker-skinned women with something they may not have a tutorial for: the confidence to wear bold colors, to stand up to haters, and, more important, to choose how they present themselves.

They try different makeup brands to show that they do work on dark skin or, of course, that they don’t. They teach women not to be afraid of color, like red lipstick, bright yellow eye shadow or holographic highlights.

Their videos and social media posts are finding an audience of black women who are ready to spend money on beauty products, studies show, but have few choices to pick from.

“Most beauty launches never worked for me,” Ms. Tang said.

“A lot of times they don’t want to take the time to make the product,” Ms. Veloz said, adding that beauty companies often treat women with darker skin as “an afterthought.”

“Dark-skinned women are always kind of at the bottom of the totem pole,” Ms. Aina said. “I don’t understand that.”

To read more, go to: They Couldn’t Find Beauty Tutorials for Dark Skin. So They Made Their Own. – The New York Times


Discover more from Good Black News

Subscribe to get the latest posts to your email.

3 Comments

  1. nygurl nygurl December 4, 2018

    Not big into wearing makeup but i will definitely check out these channels

  2. Noreen Winningham Noreen Winningham December 5, 2018

    The challenge becomes to reflect on why women of color wear makeup in the first place. Women have been acculturated to looking in the mirror and overlaying the looks that we see in the media. At some point, wouldn’t it be great to see what works best to bring out the uniqueness of darker skin and features? I mostly feel that it is the unvarnished darker skin that is the unique element, and that each woman is herself unique.

  3. Abedngo Abedngo December 7, 2018

    Makeup/shamke up.Men don’t judge by how she looks “made up”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *