Fashion (Canada)

Less is more for these beauty brands with small, curated product lines.

A growing number of beauty brands are opting out of the multi-step skincare method and choosing to go low.

- By SOUZAN MICHAEL GALWAY

When Into the Gloss launched in 2010, the beauty site inadverten­tly developed a formula for every stylized medicine cabinet photo (lovingly referred to as a “top shelfie”) that has graced Instagram since then. Each snap must include serums (at least one for each day of the week—bonus points if you know what they all do), a handful of jars of moisturize­r lined up in a row and enough facial cleansers to remove the makeup of a small village each night. Maximalism took hold, and in 2019, skincare sales surpassed makeup sales for the very first time in Canada, according to market research firm NPD Group. This was to be expected, given the massive popularity of the Korean beauty multi-step routine (which encourages the use of everything from multiple cleansers to serums, creams and oils) that hit North America six years ago. Today, a quick Google search for “10-step skincare routine” yields a staggering 31 million results.

However, for every hour-long skincare regimen devotee, there’s a Marie Kondo-esque brand founder urging consumers to choose just a few high-quality products instead of amassing a vast collection—the same way one

should, if possible, invest in a well-made shirt rather than fast-fashion items that will soon unravel. Due to a combinatio­n of savvier-than-ever skincare consumers, growing concerns over the environmen­tal impact of beauty consumptio­n and global economic instabilit­y, the once-alluring glow of shelves jammed with jars is starting to dim.

Jennifer Brodeur, the Montreal-based founder of JB Skin Guru (and facialist to Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey, among others), has always been a skincare minimalist. Brodeur worked and taught in the beauty-aesthetics industry for over 20 years before launching her brand in 2016. To keep skin healthy, she stresses the importance of just three things: sleep, proper cleansing and the use of soothing ingredient­s to bring down inflammati­on. One of the main culprits of inflamed skin? Using too many products, particular­ly overly aggressive exfoliants. “I was incessantl­y criticized for my philosophy,” says Brodeur. “When I was working at a skincare clinic, I was told by the owner that I would never succeed because I wasn’t selling enough.” But Brodeur had no interest in promoting a

Three seems to be the magic number for up-andcoming tightly curated brands. After years of suffering from cystic-acne breakouts, Neada Deters, a former communicat­ions associate at Vice and former editor at Doré, launched Lesse in 2018 once she moved from Australia to New York. During her time as an editor, she found herself interviewi­ng dermatolog­ists and aesthetici­ans who spoke highly of a simple skincare regimen. Those learnings, combined with her confusing (and ultimately failed) search for good organic skincare products, led Deters to start mixing ingredient­s in her kitchen before she partnered with the Canadian farm that now grows and manufactur­es all of her products. Today, the brand sells only a serum, a mask and a cleanser, although Deters has plans to add more to the lineup, albeit slowly and steadily. Now based in L.A., Deters says she never wants “to undermine all of the amazing things our skin naturally knows how to do, like exfoliatin­g or healing itself; instead, we’re asking how we can support it so it thrives every day.”

Jordan Samuel Pacitti, a ballet dancer turned aesthetici­an turned founder of the Instagram-famous

For every hour-long skincare regimen devotee, there’s a Marie Kondo-esque brand founder urging consumers to choose just a few high-quality products.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada