Posts in beauty news
Can You Beat The Heat? Battle of the Warm Palettes

I don't know about you, but I can never get enough of a warm eye shadow palette. Matte oranges, metallic bronzes, and deep browns are right up my alley. The OG Morphe 35O palette (does anyone remember when they would sell out every week?) and Nubian Juvia's Place palettes have solidified themselves as go-tos for us warm toned lovers, but over the past month, they have run into some MAJOR competition. 

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Cocoa Swatches Doesn't Support Black Owned Beauty Brands?!๐Ÿค”๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿพโ€โ™€๏ธ

A few of you (on different platforms might I add), have called us out for not posting or supporting enough black owned beauty brands. At first listen, I found that accusation preposterous. We post and promote black owned brands ALL THE TIME! Often unsolicited, for free or at a discount.  

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New Hair, Who Dis?

Picture this: You walk out of the hair stylist's feeling bomb AF after getting your new 24" ombrรจ weave slayed. You go home and start putting on your makeup for a night out with the girls. You complete your look only to find that deep orchid colored liquid matte lippie doesn't quite pop as much as it did before. 

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Are large lips political?

On February 23rd 2016, the New York Times published an article entitled โ€œThe Model Whose Lips Spurred Racist Comments Speaks Out,โ€ referring to the infamous Instagram post of a black, MAC Cosmeticsโ€™ modelโ€™s lips, that was met with discriminatory, racist comments. Perhaps 500 years from now, a title like this might make absolutely no sense to the people reading it, but unfortunately, in 2016, itโ€™s not that hard to believe. 

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beauty newsOfunne Amaka
BUT ITS JUST MAKEUP! And other inappropriate responses to cultural appropriation

"Welcome to the new war on cultural appropriation," Cathy Young wrote for  At one time, such critiques were leveled against truly offensive art โ€” work that trafficked in demeaning caricatures, such as blackface, 19th-century minstrel shows or ethnological expositions, which literally put indigenous people on display, often in cages. But these accusations have become a common attack against any artist or artwork that incorporates ideas from another culture, no matter how thoughtfully or positively. A work can reinvent the material or even serve as a tribute, but no matter. If artists dabble outside their own cultural experiences, theyโ€™ve committed a creative sin.

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beauty newsOfunne AmakaComment