From Ingenue Entrepreneurs to Enduring Icons, Essence Beauty Carnival Brought Out the Best of Black Beauty

The energy? Buoyant. The crowd? Beautiful. The inspiration? Boundless. In the first stop in their first-ever Beauty Carnival tour, Essence magazine created a mecca for black girl magic this weekend in New York City, with some of the most notable names in the beauty, fashion and entertainment industries on site at the South Street Seaportโ€™s…

The energy? Buoyant. The crowd? Beautiful. The inspiration? Boundless. In the first stop in their first-ever Beauty Carnival tour, Essence magazine created a mecca for black girl magic this weekend in New York City, with some of the most notable names in the beauty, fashion and entertainment industries on site at the South Street Seaportโ€™s Pier 36.

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Essence beauty and fashion director Julee Wilson presided over the festivities, which included appearances by YouTube sensation Jackie Aina; beauty boss Melissa Butler (The Lip Bar); the worldโ€™s youngest female barber, 8-year-old Neijae Graham Henries; singers Ciara and Elle Varner; Justine Skye; Yandy Smith; and the supreme supermodel Iman, who slayed even with a fractured wrist, wearing a couture satin wrap cast to accept her 2019 Beauty Carnival Icon Award.

After 40 years in the industry, the still-gorgeous model and mogul who paved the way for both Naomi Campbell and Fentyโ€™s full spectrum beauty dropped gems for the Beauty Carnival audience as she recounted her journey from ambassadorโ€™s child to refugee to supermodel, to makeup maven.

Who knew that Imanโ€™s first official modeling job was American Vogueโ€”a mere three days after she arrived in New York City from Somalia? Speaking on the abrupt cultural shift from her African upbringing, she told Wilson:

โ€œTo me, it was like a cultural shock, being described as โ€˜the black model,โ€™โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™d never heard my name or myself being described as blackโ€”I come from a black country. So nobody has had that descriptor about themselves.โ€

That first job, followed by many others would lay the foundation (pun intended) for Iman Cosmetics, which was a pioneer in multiculturally accessible makeup, as artists simply didnโ€™t know how to blend or match a hue to a black woman. And what does she think about the 40-plus shade phenomenon that Fenty Beauty inspired?

โ€œAt the end of the day, itโ€™s not the amount of tones you have; itโ€™s the colors,โ€ Iman said, noting that Rihanna is one this generationโ€™s beauty icons. โ€œitโ€™s the nuances, and the formulation. ... for Iman Cosmetics, it has always beenโ€”my philosophy has always been authenticity, longevity and relevancy. Thatโ€™s what it stands for, and thatโ€™s what it still stands for, 25 years later.โ€ (Fun fact: Iโ€™m wearing foundation from Iman Cosmetics as I write this post.)

Iman also gave some surprising advice on having a โ€œseat at the table,โ€ telling listeners to โ€œfind your tribeโ€ and โ€œstart slow.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m telling you; I am fine in eating alone,โ€ she quipped. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to compromise to be invited [to a seat at the table]. You can buy your own table. You donโ€™t have to be at the mercy of anyone else.โ€

Ciara, whose upcoming album is called Beauty Marks, clarified the releaseโ€™s title for the Beauty Carnival audience, telling us that it referred to the stretch marks on her back developed during two cherished pregnancies. Fittingly, daughter Sienna turned two this weekend.

2018 WWD Beauty Influencer of the Year Jackie Aina appeared in an interview segment called โ€œNo Shade,โ€ and, acknowledging how a bigger platform encourages a bigger voice, called out beauty brands who poach ideas from upstart influencers like herself. She also got clear on her unpredictable trajectory from pharmacist-in-training to military officer and wife to pop-culture creative. And in her ever-relatable fashion, Aina reminded us that social media images are never all they seem, and that despite securing the bag, sheโ€™s still (mostly) just like us.

And then, there were the lewksโ€”because we never come to play, we come to slay. The next New York Fashion Week isnโ€™t until September, but the spring street style was on point for Essence Beauty Carnival, as were the bevy of black-owned brands in their marketplace.

The takeaway? There is no shortage of black brilliance, black ingenuity or black girl magic in the worldโ€”and no shortage of iterations of black beauty, as Love & Hip Hop: New Yorkโ€™s Yandy Smith when talking about how sheโ€™s using love to combat colorism for her daughters.

The Glow Up tip: Want to catch up on the Beauty Carnival action? Check out the Essence YouTube channel for highlights! Or catch the next stop at the 2019 Essence Festival in New Orleans from July 4-7.

Straight From The Root

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