Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Celebrity skincare brands are taking over the beauty industry

- GERRY CUPIDO geraldine.cupido@inl.co.za

FROM actors to models, singers to influencer­s, it seems if you’re famous enough, you can now create your own beauty brand.

Over the past 20 years, the celebrity beauty industry has grown at a rapid rate. It started back in the 2000s, with megastars like Beyoncé, Jennifer Lopez, Britney Spears and even Rihanna developing their own perfumes.

Twenty years on and Britney Spears’s Fantasy and Rihanna’s Reb’l Fleur remain very popular. While the Lift Me Up singer now has a new perfume under her Fenty Beauty brand, Reb’l Fleur remains a best seller due to its affordable price tag, since Fenty is considered a luxury perfume.

Celebrity perfumes were just the beginning of what has become a trend. So much so that celebrity skincare and make-up brands are now flooding the market and creating stiff competitio­n for more establishe­d brands.

When beauty influencer­s post their make-up looks on social media platforms, you’ll see more and more of them using brands like Kylie Jenner’s Kylie Cosmetics, Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty or Lady Gaga’s Haus Labs, over, let’s say, the more establishe­d make-up brands like MAC or Nars cosmetics.

If it’s not influencer­s, then it’s the stars themselves who are inundating our timelines with their products. Most celebritie­s have millions of followers. Kylie Jenner alone has 372 million, while her sister, Kim Kardashian, who recently launched her skincare line, SKKN by Kim, has 333 million.

They don’t even need expensive marketing campaigns to get their brands out there when all they need is their face and social media. They are the brand. The product is secondary.

And who wouldn’t want to own a piece of their favourite celebrity? Even if it’s something as small as lip-gloss.

According to those who have

come close to her, Rihanna smells like heaven. So why wouldn’t her fans want to own her perfume? Her Fenty perfume has been flying off shelves.

Have you seen Kylie Jenner’s lips? Even though we all know they are not completely natural, they are plump and full. This is why her lip kits were and still are so popular.

Ariana Grande, who recently launched her own beauty brand called R.E.M. Beauty, is famous for her eyeliner looks, so she has a midnight black eyeliner marker in her collection.

The glazed doughnut look is one of summer’s hottest make-up looks, made popular by supermodel Hailey Bieber.

Did she create the look to promote her reasonably priced skincare brand Rhode, which features a collection of products that will make you glow?

If so, it was a clever move. Not only did she create a trend, but she’s given her followers the tools to get her famous glazed glow. She has “Peptide glazing fluid” in her range.

While most celebrity beauty brands rely heavily on name recognitio­n, it doesn’t hurt that many have chosen to align with a cause.

Selena Gomez’s mission-driven Rare Beauty recently donated $1.2 million from its non-profit Rare Impact Fund to mental health services.

Lady Gaga’s Haus Laboratori­es – a vegan and cruelty-free cosmetics range – sets out to create awareness around LGBTQ+ rights and HIV/Aids.

“Clients want to be connected to what a celebrity stands for,” Alison Hahn, Sephora’s SVP of make-up and fragrance, tells Allure. “What are their values? What are the emotional connection­s, and is there something good and a mission behind the celebrity?

The products (also) need to work.”

With the celebrity beauty space becoming increasing­ly congested, the ultimate strength and longevity of the brands depend on whether or not customers make repeated purchases.

Some celebritie­s are so keen to get a piece of the popular pie that they hit snags before they even lift off.

Kim Kardashian’s newly launched SKKN by Kim line was hit with a trademark lawsuit filed by Beauty Concepts, a four-year-old skincare company operating under the brand SKKN+, as far back as July 2021. The black-owned US skincare boutique alleges Kardashian’s brand will confuse consumers and diminish SKKN+’s online presence.

Bieber was hit with a similar lawsuit by Purna Khatau and Phoebe Vickers, who co-founded fashion label Rhode in 2014 and refused to sell the brand to the supermodel four years ago.

Scarlett Johansson fans took issue with her skincare line, The Outset, as it promises to achieve the same polished skin as the star, even though many speculate she’s likely undergone expensive cosmetic procedures.

While you might be thinking that the market has certainly reached saturation point, in the last year alone, we’ve seen more than 10 new celeb brands pop up, with more to come.

In March, model Winnie Harlow dropped a beauty brand called Cay Skin which focuses on sun protection.

La La Anthony launched her haircare brand, Inala.

Actor Idris and his wife Sabrina Elba have launched a gender-neutral skincare line, S’ABLE Labs Skin.

This year, momager Kris Jenner trademarke­d “Kris Jenner Beauty”, “Kris Jenner Skin” and “Kris Jenner Skincare”.

Singer John Legend has announced plans to launch an affordable skincare line catering to consumers with melanated and dark skin tones.

And Brad Pitt is launching a skincare brand that combines science and nature, titled Le Domaine.

 ?? ?? HAILEY Bieber’s Rhode Peptide glazing fluid. | Instagram
HAILEY Bieber’s Rhode Peptide glazing fluid. | Instagram
 ?? | Instagram ?? ARIANA Grande launched R.E.M Beauty.
| Instagram ARIANA Grande launched R.E.M Beauty.
 ?? ?? RIHANNA’S Fenty perfume.
| Instagram
RIHANNA’S Fenty perfume. | Instagram

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