Grazia (UK)

the bespoke beauty room

The latest luxury marker in beauty? Personalis­ed products that take into account your skin type, hair texture and lipstick shade preference. Grace Cook reports

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how many unsuitable beauty products sit unused in your drawer? My skincare and make-up routine is embarrassi­ngly minimal, and yet I’ve still found myself with drawers and wicker baskets full of products I’ve used only a handful of times. I have an array of tried-and-tested base layers that have proved either too pale, too powdery or too perfumed – and now lay dormant in their plastic packaging, like the fast fashion of foundation. I’ve bought lipsticks online that didn’t suit me, and others that were too matte, each pigment clinging to each flake of chill-bitten winter skin as if its life depended on it. I have moisturise­rs that gave me breakouts; cleansers that dried my skin; shampoos that didn’t lather properly.

Imagine if we could eradicate this by buying products that were created just for us. That’s the latest propositio­n in beauty, where brands are offering bespoke make-up and skincare to fulfil our specific needs. Membership site Carra offers tailored routines and product suggestion­s for Afro and curly hair, while Dcypher deals in custom-blend foundation­s where you can select everything from the coverage and moisture level to the finish – costing £28, its online technology colour matches you in 60 seconds flat. YSL Beauty, meanwhile, has developed Rouge Sur Mesure, a smart lip device that seamlessly meshes patented tech with taste. Users buy one trio of pigments that can be turned into 4,000 shades at the click of a button – ideal for one-time party wear.

The aim, says Guive Balooch, global vice

president of L’oréal’s Technology Incubator, speaking on behalf of YSL Beauty, is to ‘make people’s lives better… to make their experience­s closer to what they desire for their beauty habits and rituals’. That a lipstick can change someone’s life is perhaps, at first thought, a bit of a stretch. But there’s a broader element of truth here. In today’s time-poor society, time has become the ultimate luxury. Having a product that won’t end up in the bottom of a drawer – that saves both time and money in the long run – does answer a real need.

The rise of bespoke beauty chimes with a broader societal shift towards individual­ism. ‘People genuinely need clarity on their routines,’ says Yasmine Lawton, founder of minimalist skincare brand Baseplus, a two-product regimen that offers custom-made moisturise­rs and serums that target individual concerns. ‘People need the right product for their unique skin [crucial factors include pollution levels and ethnicity] and they need help cutting through the noise of new brands popping up everywhere.’ Everyone, she says, is ‘tired of one-size-fits-all beauty’.

Claire Triantis, co-founder of Dcypher, agrees, and says it’s especially relevant when it comes to inclusivit­y. The parameters have, for too long, been ring-fenced around pigments alone. ‘As an industry, we’ve been trying to fit seven billion people across the globe into 60 rigid shade boxes,’ she says. ‘That’s before we talk about skin type, coverage preference­s… All of which are unique to each customer based on their skin type and what they are looking for from their make-up.’ She says no two foundation­s that leave the Dcypher lab are ever the same; customers are given ‘complete control to design their perfect formula’. After my all-time favourite BB cream base was discontinu­ed (Givenchy, I’m looking at you), the potential of Dcypher personally fills me with zeal.

Developmen­ts in technology have enabled such innovation­s. Dcypher and Baseplus both use data and machine learning to map the skin, while YSL Beauty is currently researchin­g how the tech used for Rouge Sur Mesure can be applied to foundation­s. Even Google has unveiled new technology that ‘uses artificial intelligen­ce to help identify skin, hair and nail conditions based on images uploaded by users’, according to Victoria Buchanan, futures director at strategic foresight consultanc­y The Future Laboratory. It effectivel­y means that our frantic midnight Google searches to self-diagnose might soon have some medical merit.

Tech’s influx into beauty is effectivel­y democratis­ing it – a fact fuelled by the pandemic, when dermatolog­ists, facialists et al were forced online. Skincare service Lion/ne offers consultati­ons via Zoom with a panel of experts, while Us-based Apostrophe and Aussie label Skinsoftwa­re offer prescripti­on-type skincare prescribed by in-house dermatolog­ists. ‘Many people don’t have access to a specialist who can provide individual­ised recommenda­tions, so bespoke beauty can be really helpful in guiding product choices,’ says Dr Alexis Granite, a consultant dermatolog­ist for science-backed brand Skin + ME.

Understand­ing the needs and stresses of our skin is part of a bigger shift to scientific self-awareness, aligned with the volume of data at our fingertips. Through various apps we can track everything from our menstrual cycle or blood-sugar levels to sleep patterns. ‘Today’s beauty consumers are hypereduca­ted,’ says Buchanan. ‘Machine learning and algorithms are creating feedback for consumers looking to improve their skin quality, and helping brands build long-term relationsh­ips with customers. Future beauty innovation­s will enable customers to use their own bio-feedback to totally transform and engineer their skin.’

Not only that, bespoke beauty can also transform our consumptio­n. In this Covid-19 era, many customers won’t want to buy used beauty products through resale sites; plastic tubes filled with foundation and lipsticks can’t be recycled. Having products designed specifical­ly for us automatica­lly eliminates that waste. ‘Each shade is made on receipt of every order,’ says Triantis. ‘Bespoke directly answers the increasing needs for sustainabi­lity in the beauty industry.’ Imagine skin that’s healthier, happier and clearer. Imagine, too, drawers that are emptier. The opportunit­ies for bespoke beauty are really quite flawless.

WE’VE BEEN TRYING TO FIT SEVEN BILLION PEOPLE ACROSS THE GLOBE INTO 60 RIGID SHADE BOXES

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