Face Mask

Face Mask

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Tyrone Edwards On Mental Health, Being Un-Muted and Caring for the Underserved

“We’re on the verge of something big, massive, huge. We have the opportunity to be a part of one of the most transformative times in history, a moment in time that can be remembered in history books as people who truly fought for change,” said etalk co-anchor Tyrone Edwards in a virtual TEDx talk that streamed live late last year. Called “My Trauma is Not a Trend,” the fifteen-minute video shows the Canadian television personality, whose career began in 2011 as a host for MuchMusic and progressed to E! then etalk, speaking candidly about the world finally seeming to wake up to anti-Black racism in the wake of George Floyd’s death in police custody in May 2020.

“I never thought I’d see this chance for change in my lifetime. In fact, I spent many years building up a wall around me to protect me. Building up a tolerance to mistreatment and harassment just to get me through. So as much as this excites me, it also terrifies me — because my trauma just cannot be a trend,” he goes on to say, opening up about his worries that the momentum of the collective outcry, which erupted through protests and black squares dominating social media, will fizzle as many wait for life to return to some sort of pre-pandemic normalcy.

This isn’t Edwards’ first time speaking out publicly. The powerful TEDx talk, which sees the broadcaster dive into some of his daily realities and struggles as a Black man in society, came after the pop culture reporter’s incredibly emotional and viral moment on The Social mere days after Floyd’s death during a segment on men’s mental health and the pandemic. While being interviewed, a tearful Edwards expressed his pain and outrage over the systemic racism and violence Black people continue to experience, and his boiling frustration that those outside of the Black community around him don’t seem to express the same level of anger when injustices occur. Since that raw moment on national television, Edwards’ clout has been on a much-needed rise within the entertainment industry, and we’re all here for it.

Below, FASHION caught up with Edwards to talk about his latest co-anchor role, breaking free from fear to pursue his dreams and what’s on his horizon.

On his role at etalk
“I’ve taken this seat as the co-anchor of etalk and the timing is just impeccable. Yes, we’re an entertainment show, but now that I’m un-muted, I can bring so much more to the table and talk about things that matter: anti-Black racism, mental health, mandated masculinity and what that looks like today versus what it did before. I love that my journey as an individual, my journey as a man, has prepared me for this very moment that I’m in right now.”

On his career journey and learning to never stop dreaming…
“Initially, I had a very particular, very niche dream: I wanted to host RapCity on MuchMusic. I knew exactly what I wanted to do, and I did that. I was literally living the dream almost to the point of it being so exciting that I felt guilty because the older you get, when you look around, you realize how many people aren’t. I also come from very humble means and my mother and my aunt taught me how to be satisfied and not want for everything. When you don’t have much, you have to learn how to make do with what you have and be grateful. So when I got the RapCity job, I felt guilty to want for more, to dream for more. But time on the job led to more access (bigger celebrities, bigger experiences), and eventually what ended up happening was I built up the nerve to dream again by doing some personal work to become a better version of myself and to realize why I was thinking the way I was. A lot of it had to do with me just thinking like a survivor. But I realized, ‘Hold on. I’m not just surviving anymore. Now it’s time to thrive. Now it’s time to build. Now it’s time to think about dreaming again.’ So I did, which has helped me grow in front of the camera over the last couple of years. It’s also made me a better reporter and host in general.”

On what’s next…
“I’m a community guy and one of my legacy pieces is going to be free walk-in mental health clinics for youth. Right now, I’m an ambassador for the Yorktown Family Services Mental Health Walk-In Clinic near where I grew up and the numbers are unreal in terms of the need for mental health services, how they’re being received and the positive impact that they’re creating. But I know that getting mental health support is not something that is easily accessible — or even a reality — in a lot of neighbourhoods like the one that I grew up in. And what that really comes down to is neighbourhoods being underserved. Like the neighbourhood that I grew up in: There’s nothing wrong with it; it’s just underserved.

“So I want the walk-in clinic to be replicated throughout the city where it’s needed: In all other underserved neighbourhoods that are lower income or have a lot of single-income homes. I’m no doctor, but I truly believe that mental health is linked to rising crime rates and people going in and out of jail. A lot of times, these are people who have issues that have never been diagnosed. People that could really use some support but never get it.

“It wasn’t until my twenties before I started to realize that it wasn’t weird or weak to speak to someone. That I didn’t have to feel ashamed or lesser than. I didn’t think like that when I was 17. I even remember my first [therapy] session and getting into my car afterwards and driving away. I was like, ‘What the hell? That’s a luxury! No wonder rich people do that stuff. I wish I could afford to do that every two weeks.’ Because it is a luxury to be able to talk so someone and have them work through things with you professionally and without biases. And it’s not about just about going when you’re at your worst. It can be preventative. Your mental health is the most important thing.”

Missed our last My Story column? Click here.

The post Tyrone Edwards On Mental Health, Being Un-Muted and Caring for the Underserved appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/2NCpQNh
via babu31blog

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Willlow and Jaden Smith Have Teamed up With Their Parents on a Personal Care Brand

The Smith family is making their way to the beauty aisle. Power couple Will and Jada have teamed up with their kids, Jaden and Willow, to launch an eco-friendly personal care brand called Hey Humans, WWD reported today.

The Smiths have collaborated with beauty-brand incubator Maesa (which has also partnered with celebs like Taraji P. Henson and Priyanka Chopra Jonas for their own lines) for the project. According to Maesa, Hey Humans is 99 percent plastic-free, packaging their vegan formulas in aluminum and paper containers. The name speaks to the family’s overall mission, a call-to-action to treat both our bodies and planet well.

“For me, personal care is a practice that represents self-love,” Pinkett Smith, who is also the brand’s creative director, told WWD. “COVID-19 has made us all, myself included, pause and think about our daily routine, the values we live by and the ingredients in the products we use. From self-care rituals to natural, nuanced beauty, we’re all seeking ways to enhance our lives and incorporate a more holistic approach to a healthy lifestyle from the comfort of our homes.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Hey Humans (@heyhumansofficial)

Hey Humans is launching with four products: a foaming body wash enriched with moisturizing jojoba seed oil; a lightweight body lotion formulated with soothing aloe leaf juice and Vitamin E; a natural deodorant that contains sweat-absorbing arrowroot powder; and a minty fluoride toothpaste. Each of the body products also come in multiple, gender-neutral scents, like calming lavender vanilla, and use upcycled fragrance ingredients.

The Smiths are no strangers to working together. In 2015, Will and Jada helped Jaden launch Just Water, a sustainably sourced spring water brand housed in plant-derived cartons.

The brand is now available exclusively at Target, and nothing costs more than $6 (USD). There’s no word yet on when Hey Humans will be available in Canada, but we’ll update this post with the latest info.

The post Willlow and Jaden Smith Have Teamed up With Their Parents on a Personal Care Brand appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/3aKtvl0
via babu31blog

Nidhi Sunil, L’Oréal Paris’s New Spokesperson, Speaks Out About Colourism

“I wasn’t trying to be a colourism advocate,” says Nidhi Sunil over a Zoom call. “But once I started modelling, I was faced with so many professional roadblocks that I had to combat it and stand up for myself.” The model, actress and philanthropist, who grew up in South India and went to school in Bombay, has just been announced as L’Oréal Paris’ new Global Ambassador. Sunil worked in environmental law before signing with Elite Model Management in Bombay at age 22. In the last 10 years, she has graced the pages of international magazines, appeared in films, and starred and fashion and beauty campaigns. Today, she becomes the first Indian model to be signed as a Global Ambassador for L’Oréal Paris.

“In India, it’s a huge deal to be a L’Oréal spokesperson,” says Sunil. “One the first Indian L’Oréal spokespeople was Aishwarya Rai [actress and the winner of the Miss World 1994 pageant]. I remember her advertisement being blasted all over when I was a kid.” Sunil hopes that her new role with the beauty brand will “open the gates for other girls who […] aren’t fair-skinned and have green eyes,” which is the ideal beauty standard in India, she says.

“Mainstream aspirational beauty in India is very fair — very white — and considering it’s a country full of brown people, it’s kind of a colonial hangover,” says Sunil. “You have a self-loathing for your own skin colour. I had to fight to create space for myself in the modelling industry, even in India, because we actually had a lot of models [working in Bombay] from England, South Africa, Russia, and I had to push my management agency to make space for Indian girls [like me] — in an Indian market! That’s why I feel like this collaboration is pivotal, because I didn’t grow up seeing someone like me on billboards and in mainstream advertisements, even in India, my own country.”

Sunil’s hope is that her partnership with L’Oréal Paris will speak to young boys and girls who, like her, grew up feeling “unrepresented, unseen and collectively barred from feeling beautiful. [Now I’m] in a position to talk about a large and collective shared experience as a dark-skinned Indian person.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Nidhi Sunil (@nidhisunil)

In her 10 years in the modelling industry, Sunil has witnessed the evolution of social media and the way that models, and anyone in the public eye, can use it to take control of their own stories. She has tried to leverage the power of social media to change the messaging around beauty standards. “Before the internet and social media, whatever you saw on TV was truth,” she says. “So if a brand was advertising that something was true, then [we assumed] it must have been true. There was a collective brainwashing. Today, it’s up to us to reach out to our communities and share what we feel, what we believe, and to shape our own collective narratives instead of giving someone else the power to brand your own perceptions in their favour.”

The first L’Oréal Paris campaign that Sunil will appear in will be under the shampoo category. “My relationship with hair is so deep,” she says. “I grew up with my mom shoving coconut oil onto my head and making me sleep with it against my will so I’d have long beautiful when I grew up. Hair is such a huge part of my identity.” Because of her emotional ties to her long hair, Sunil jokes that “at this point, because it’s such a huge part of my identity, I would cut it off just to see what it’s like. That’s what 2020 has done to me. After this past year it’s like, ‘Oh, you want me to destroy my identity and come out the other side? Fine.’”

The post Nidhi Sunil, L’Oréal Paris’s New Spokesperson, Speaks Out About Colourism appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/3smpXez
via babu31blog

Monday, February 22, 2021

You Already Know CARYS’s Song from TikTok

Aviva Mongillo, a.k.a. CARYS, had been acting in projects like CBC’s Workin’ Moms, Long Shot with Charlize Theron and Seth Rogen, and Family Channel’s popular TV series Backstage, and working on her solo music career for several years when, in 2019, she planned on overhauling her image as a musician and creating a new stage identity.

That plan was thwarted when the Markham, Ont. native’s 2017 song “Princesses Don’t Cry” suddenly went viral on TikTok, two years after its initial release. (It has since racked up a mind-blowing 71 million-plus spins, and counting, and peaked at #2 on Spotfiy’s Global Viral Chart.) This unexpected exposure forced CARYS to embrace who she was instead of trying to create a character for herself.

In the JUNO Awards latest installment in its Rising Presented by TD series, a series of mini-documentaries profiling up-and-coming Canadian talent, the 22-year-old To Anyone Like Me musician talks about relinquishing control, embracing her identity and learning to no longer seek external validation. Here, CARYS dives deeper into her personal journey to self-acceptance — and the joys of TikTok.

In the Rising Presented by TD video, you talk about choosing between breakthrough and setback. How have you learned to get out of your own way?

Very slowly, haha. I think it’s a process. I don’t think I’m 100% out of my own way yet. With each new experience or opportunity I challenge myself to do the most loving thing I can do and be as loving as I can. Sometimes my fear of possible outcomes stops me from just going for it in the moment but I try to cheer myself on for every time I do choose to push through.

How did you react when the sudden TikTok success around “Princesses Don’t Cry” threw a wrench in your plan to recreate your identity? How did you deal with that lack of control? 

When anything doesn’t go to plan for me I kind of freak out, even if it’s something as small as not doing my laundry at the time I said I was going to do my laundry. So on this much larger scale, I was scared to let go of my plan. It’s been super vulnerable for me because I wasn’t aware that I was trying to play a character until I didn’t want the character to go away, but this experience has taught me a lot about letting go and trusting the process. I was trying to write music for a character and now I’m continuously discovering parts of who I truly am through writing music and I find that much more fulfilling.

You talk about feeling like sharing your work is like opening up your diary to the world. What advice do you have for people putting themselves out there in similar ways? 

I always ask myself, “When I’m old and grey and I’m looking back at this time, what do I want the story to be? That I let my fear stop me from going after what I wanted or that I took that leap of faith?” And the answer for me is always obvious, but it’s never easy!

@itsari.aleisePOV: you’re my younger sibling and you are scared for your first ball but I got your back❤️♬ Princesses Don’t Cry – CARYS

How do you feel today when you hear “Princesses Don’t Cry” on TikTok — does the excitement ever wear off?

I feel like I get more and more excited as time goes on. In a generation where it only takes 15 seconds to move on to the next trend, I feel overwhelmingly grateful that so many people are still supporting and loving that song! I’ll never get sick of it.

What’s your favourite thing about TikTok? 

TikTok makes me feel less alone and makes me laugh so much. I love seeing people share their stories; it’s made me feel more confident to do the same. I find myself going “Other people feel this too?! Thank GOODNESS” a lot. And I love stealing recipes from TikTok. I learned how to make fettuccine alfredo in quarantine and it was restaurant quality.

What was the experience of being in a bigger Hollywood movie production like Long Shot compared to a TV production like Workin’ Moms

I have always been a big Seth Rogen fan so the idea of being on set with him intimidated and excited me! Once I was there, it was super calm and fun and I just remember running my lines 600 times trying to be as prepared as possible, obviously wanting to make a good impression. I channeled my nerves into the work all day and as soon as I wrapped I had a “holy crap” moment where I just fan-girled to myself.

Is not seeking external validation something you still have to work through at times? If so, how do you deal with that urge?

Yes, of course. I think it’s human nature to want validation from other humans. I deal with it by giving it to myself! I realized that I can be someone who needs validation and someone who can validate me at the same time.

Finally, what’s your all-time favourite karaoke song? 

I don’t have an all-time favourite but I almost always choose a One Direction song.

 

Watch the full Rising Presented by TD mini-doc about CARYS here: 

The post You Already Know CARYS’s Song from TikTok appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/2Nvu611
via babu31blog

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Monday Haircare Has Landed in Canada + Other Beauty News This Week

Sparitual launches a nail wellness kit

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by SPARITUAL (@sparitualist)

Los Angeles-based nail and body care brand Sparitual launched a new Nail Wellness Collection on February 15, featuring an all-star lineup that includes a cuticle remover and oil, a nail strengthening treatment and a topcoat. The products are all vegan and reflect the beauty industry’s shift toward hand care, health and hygiene. Featuring nourishing ingredients like bamboo extract, bamboo oil and argan oil, there’s never been a better time to give your hands and nails some serious TLC.

Monday haircare makes its Canadian debut

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by MONDAY HAIRCARE (@mondayhaircare)

Launching a new haircare collection right before an unsettling global lockdown that upended every aspect of life sounds stressful, but for New Zealand entrepreneur Jaimee Lupton, the timing last March seemed to reiterate the messaging behind her brand, Monday. “Beauty shouldn’t have to cost an arm and a leg,” says Lupton. “We set out to make luxury accessible; given the times, I think that that was very important for people.” Priced at $10 and under, the pastel-pink SLS- and paraben-free line of four in-shower cleansing and conditioning duos sold out within days when it first hit New Zealand and Australian drugstore shelves and has now officially landed at mass-market retailers across Canada. With nourishing and strengthening ingredients such as shea butter, coconut oil, vitamin E and rice protein, the offerings include Gentle for fine and fragile hair, Volume for limp, Smooth for coarse and Moisture for dry. “All our ingredients are fair trade and sustainable; those are huge pillars of our brand and are very important to us,” says Lupton.

Cheekbone Beauty enters the eye category


Canadian Indigenous cosmetics brand Cheekbone Beauty has made a splash with their first eye product launch following the success of the brand’s vegan lipsticks which are made and hand-poured in Canada with sustainably sourced ingredients and housed in biodegradable packaging. On February 19, the brand launched Sustain Eyes, a collection of vegan and gluten-free eyeliner pencils in five shades (black, brown, plum, green and blue). The liners are housed in wood that comes from PEFC Certified protected forests and packaged in plantable seed paper. “Staying connected to our Indigenous roots, Sustain Eyes takes us one step closer to creating beautiful makeup products founded in the pillar of sustainability, bringing awareness to how our actions today will impact the next generations,” says founder Jennifer Harper. “Once you have sharpened the pencil all the way, it’s gone and leaves no trace.”

Tower 28 adds new shades to its cult fave BeachPlease Luminous Tinted Balm offerings

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tower 28 Beauty (@tower28beauty)

Beauty brand Tower 28 has become a favourite among clean beauty enthusiasts thanks to its gentle formulations, versatile shade offerings and compliance with the National Eczema Association’s ingredient guidelines, ensuring no potential allergens and irritants make their way into the product formulas. This week the brand added three new shade offerings to its BeachPlease Luminous Tinted Balm that can be used on lips, eyes and cheeks. The new shades, After Hours, Rush Hour and Power Hour, were inspired by the colours of the Santa Monica sunset. “These new shade extensions are crowdsourced from our amazing community,” said founder Amy Liu in a statement. “I’m proud to have a highly engaged community and we make a practice of regularly asking them what is missing. They spoke and we listened!”

Benefit’s new They’re Real! Magnet Extreme Mascara is here

Benefit’s biggest launch of the year has arrived and it’s an addition to the brand’s impressive portfolio of mascaras offerings. They’re Real! Magnet Extreme Lengthening Mascara features a brush with a revolutionary magnetically charged core that pulls the magnetic, mineral-enriched formula up and out, beyond the tips of lashes. Its custom-designed zig-zag bristles are strategically positioned to fan out, separate and define lashes. “Beyond the technology and the results, it was still important that we developed a mascara for everyday wear,” says Annie Ford Danielson, Chief Beauty Ambassador of Benefit Cosmetics. “We went through extremely rigorous testing standards for every part of the formulation and went through 78 iterations of the formula. Our biggest claim is that this mascara results in 40% longer lashes.”

Bite Beauty dropped a new liquid liner

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by BITE Beauty (@bitebeauty)


A black liquid eyeliner is a beauty bag staple, but trying to find one that’s made from high-quality, clean ingredients is a challenge. Enter: Bite Beauty. Known for its non-toxic, vegan and cruelty-free formulas, Bite’s first-ever liner, Upswing Extreme Longwear Liquid Eyeliner, is made with nourishing passionflower extract and a fruit-derived thickening agent that delivers smooth-glide colour. What’s more: The felt-tip dip applicator is something even eyeliner amateurs can master to swish and flick their way to a flawless cat-eye. Bonus: the pitch-black pigment doesn’t budge once it dries.

The post Monday Haircare Has Landed in Canada + Other Beauty News This Week appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/37zxq25
via babu31blog

Smash + Tess Has a New Collab with Hilary Duff, Plus More Fashion News To Know This Week

Smash & Tess is launching a romper-ific collection made in collaboration with Hilary Duff

smash tess hilary duff
Photography courtesy of Smash + Tess.

Vancouver-based brand Smash + Tess continues to, well, smash it with collabs. This time, it has teamed up with actress and entrepreneur Hilary Duff to create a range of chilled-out rompers and takes on the brand’s best-selling Romperalls. “One of the best parts about this project for me was that everyone who was involved were women,” Duff said in a press release about the collection, which launches February 23. “We all have different things going on in our lives, different bodies, different wants and needs, but we all sat down and collaborated on everything from the colours, fabrics, fits…it was really fun.”

You can now shop Roxy Earle’s closet on Poshmark

roxy earle poshmark
Photography courtesy of Poshmark.

If you spent your viewing time during the Real Housewives of Toronto coveting Roxy Earle’s outfits, good news: You can finally snatch up those looks. Find Gucci sandals, an Hervé Léger runway piece, loungewear and a number of other previously loved pieces on Poshmark. A portion of proceeds from sales will go to the Toronto-based women’s shelter, Ernestines.

The SWAIA/Santa Fe Indian Market’s latest virtual exhibition focuses on Indigenous jewellery design

Photography courtesy of the Santa Fe Indian Market.

Running online until March 28, “Indigenous Brilliance: The Shape of Jewelry” highlights the oeuvres of creatives — many of whom are First Canadian — including Dana Claxton (pictured), Rose Simpson, Keri Ataumbi, Indi City, Catherine Blackburn, Helen Oro, Moonture Studios, and Peter Williams. The show was curated by Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, and each artist’s style, which ranges from beading to metalsmithing and more, is thoughtfully presented in a video format that includes interviews as well as a visual exploration of their work.

Louis Vuitton has released a collection of bracelets in support of UNICEF

louis vuitton lockit
Photography courtesy of Louis Vuitton.

Crafted using recycled silver, the new Lockit bracelets from Louis Vuitton aren’t just a charming accessory; they’re pieces made with purpose. $100 from each bracelet sold will go to the child welfare-focused organization, UNICEF. There’s also a monogrammed version of the brand’s beloved Doudou Louis teddy bear that’s part of the collection, should something softer strike your fancy.

Love & Nudes’ founder Chantal Carter is part of Shopify’s upcoming panel featuring Black business leaders

On February 26 at 12pm PST, Shopify is hosting a two-part panel discussion highlighting the rise and grind of Black entrepreneurs including Toronto-based lingerie pioneer Chantal Carter, founder of the inclusive brand Love & Nudes; Kyra Young, CEO and co-founder of the vegan hair and skincare line Kyra’s Shea Medleys; and Maeva, who launched the hair brand Bread Beauty Supply. The panel is part of Shopify’s Build Black series, augmenting the platform’s business education and Black-owned business directory initiatives.

Mr. Saturday’s collaboration with cannabis brand Edition is now available

edition mr. saturday collab
Photography provided by Edition.

Cult brand Mr. Saturday and recently-launched pot retailer Edition have joined forces on a selection of loungewear items and cannabis accessories — expect to find slippers, sweatshirts, doob tubes, bongs…all the makings for a pretty good Saturday, ya know? The assortment was inspired by “the enduring luxury” of hotel getaways and “timelessness of hand-written letters,” and debuted as part of Mr. Saturday’s recent New York Fashion Week virtual presentation.

The post Smash + Tess Has a New Collab with Hilary Duff, Plus More Fashion News To Know This Week appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/3dJ2UH9
via babu31blog

15 Gifts for a Pisces That Will Make a Splash

Pisces season is here so we’ve done the heavy lifting and found 15 great gifts for all the Pisces in your life. This chill water sign is one to get creative so why not indulge them in some of our favourite things?

Help them connect to their water sign with ocean scents, a salmon leather clutch, a boat coat or puka shell earrings. They’ll get a kick out of a fish-shaped bag from Bode or a serene-looking beach puzzle that will allow them escape to Hawaii mentally. Support Ocean conservation with gifts like the Parley artist collaboration totes, a swimsuit made from recycled water bottles from Fair Harbor or a staple pair of sneakers made with recycled ocean plastic. For the proud Pisces that wants to rep their sign all the time, look to Canadian jewellery brands like Mejuri and By Annalay for the perfect star sign keepsake.

Click through our favourite gifts for Pisces no matter the occasion and make a splash with Pisces-approved gifts for everyone on your list.

Interested in astrology? Check out our 2021 predictions here.

 

The post 15 Gifts for a Pisces That Will Make a Splash appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/2Zzzjr2
via babu31blog