Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Nkuto now more than a family favorite

Ingredient used in Hanahana Beauty products, which hit shelves in 400 Ulta stores. Meet the woman behind them.

- By Darcel Rockett drockett@chicagotri­bune. com

For South Loop resident Abena Boamah-Acheampong, nkuto (aka raw, organic shea butter) had been a staple in her home growing up in Ohio.

Nkuto was an ingredient her mother Juliana would add to her own body-butter concoction­s for family usage.

“Dry skin? My mom would say spread nkuto on you. Body pains, use nkuto —it was our go-to,” Boamah-Acheampong said.

Now, as CEO and founder of skin care brand Hanahana Beauty, Boamah-Acheampong wants to make shea butter products everyone’s go-to. That’s not surprising to her mom, who said, “I have never run out of shea butter in the house.”

On March 5 Hanahana products went on shelves at 400 Ulta Beauty stores across the nation, including Ulta’s landmark Mag Mile site at 430 N. Michigan Ave.

Hanahana Beauty products are made with ethically and sustainabl­y sourced Ghanaian-harvested shea butter. The bestsellin­g items are the amber vanilla and bamboo coconut shea body butters and Hanahana’s two-in-one aftershowe­r moisturizi­ng and exfoliatin­g body bar.

The Ulta launch, part of its Sparked initiative that makes emerging brands accessible, came on Boamah-Acheampong’s 32nd birthday and Hanahana’s sixth anniversar­y. When talking about her brand’s trajectory since its creation in 2017, one can hear the smile and enthusiasm in her voice.

What started as gifts for friends and a tangible form of self-care that she made in her former three-bedroom Logan Square apartment has turned into a South Loop-headquarte­red operation with at least a dozen workers. She also has a partnershi­p with the Katargia Cooperativ­e in Tamale, Ghana, a cooperativ­e of about 60 women who produce the shea butter Hanahana uses. Boamah-Acheampong’s parents are from Ghana.

With grants from groups such as beauty company Glossier and the cocokind impact foundation, Hanahana Beauty products are sold not just on the firm’s site and Ulta, but on Revolve.com, JCPenney and Chicago-based Asrai Garden.

“Abena’s passion and approach to developing consciousl­y clean skin care products sourced directly from women in Ghana deeply inspired us, and we knew the brand would be equally as exciting for our Ulta Beauty guests to discover,” said Muffy Clince, director of emerging brands at Ulta Beauty.

“I want us to be a household name,” Boamah-Acheampong said. “A lot of the people that grew with us now have children, and their children are even using the product. That’s something that I want to continue as we continue to branch out, but I also want to be real intentiona­l around how we grow.”

The brand grew during the pandemic thanks to shoutouts from celebritie­s and influencer­s, press about the consciousl­y clean brand, and an influx of people caring more about skin care while they were at home, Boamah-Acheampong said.

Growth, for Boamah-Acheampong, means producing shea butter products in Africa and increasing sales in the U.S. and U.K. retail

and e-commerce spaces. Growth also means transparen­cy and sustainabi­lity — all things the direct-toconsumer brand prioritize­s.

“Hanahana” in the Twi dialect of the Akan language spoken in Ghana means malleable, smooth and flowing, Boamah-Acheampong said. She hopes it translates to customers feeling smooth and confident in their own skin.

“I have always been driven around how do you help people?” Boamah-Acheampong said.

She reflects on how the

brand brings humanity into the beauty space, she said.

“We do that through creating self-sustainabl­e paths, from the producer we source from — we pay two times the asking price for raw materials — as well as creating access for health care for the producers and their neighbors,” Boamah-Acheampong said.

Hanahana provides health education to shea butter producers and farmers in rural communitie­s across northern Ghana, as well as equipment improvemen­ts for

production, and advocacy for shea tree protection­s. Hanahana Beauty’s Circle of Care social impact initiative works to improve economic conditions and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity for women in the shea trade.

“It’s about how you treat your community,” Boamah-Acheampong said. “How do we treat our community that’s sustaining us through our products? How do I grow and scale this to be a successful and impactful brand that is not intentiona­lly harmful because the beauty space can be very harmful, especially to Black and brown bodies.”

“I’ve tried a lot of skin care products over the years, but Hanahana Beauty’s shea body butter is hands down my favorite,” said Madea Neyor, a customer since 2019. “I love that it’s a simple, effective and clean option for everyday use . ... It’s a brand I feel good about supporting and championin­g.”

Formerly on a path

to becoming a clinical psychologi­st, Boamah-Acheampong now uses her therapy background to help Hanahana’s beauty team and partners. Whether it’s a yoga session for staff or organizing Mother’s Day activities in New York, Chicago and Ghana, Boamah-Acheampong said she tries to use all she’s learned to aid Hanahana’s organic growth.

“Black women globally affect everyone, and that’s how we think of our product philosophy and how we create daily-use, resultsdri­ven products,” she said. “The coldness and dryness of Chicago definitely inspired me to start making my own body butters in 2014 for fun. I was curious around ingredient­s and boosting my own self-confidence by knowing what I was putting on my body.

“I did that for many years. And since 2017, and now launching in Ulta, it’s been a journey for sure.”

 ?? TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS ?? Abena Boamah-Acheampong, who founded Hanahana Beauty, at the company headquarte­rs on South Michigan Avenue in Chicago on March 2. Her products are now in 400 Ulta Beauty stores.
TERRENCE ANTONIO JAMES/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS Abena Boamah-Acheampong, who founded Hanahana Beauty, at the company headquarte­rs on South Michigan Avenue in Chicago on March 2. Her products are now in 400 Ulta Beauty stores.
 ?? ?? Boamah-Acheampong holds some of her products.
Boamah-Acheampong holds some of her products.

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