Women of colour do not buy makeup. That statement seemed to be
the motivation that Jacque Mgido needed to venture fully into a
cosmetics range for women of colour.
At 18, she set off to the US to study, when she stumbled into the segment that had always fascinated her.
Growing
up in Zimbabwe, she always felt insecure about her looks and would be
fascinated watching her aunts transform as they put on makeup.
“I
felt that makeup did a thing for women, every time I saw them wearing
makeup they came alive. I was so curious as a kid on the transformation
that makeup could do to someone, inside and out,” she said.
Curiosity grew and she decided to go to school to study the
closest thing there was to makeup artistry, cosmetology. This involved
hair and makeup with the bulk of the time spent on doing hair and only a
couple of hours left to do what she really enjoyed.
“I went to a cosmetology school and I did hair. It was not what I wanted, but it helped me later in life,” she explained.
Once she finished school, she landed her first gig at Clarins.
“Clarins
opened my eyes because they did not have makeup for women of colour and
that got me curious. It taught me a lot because I would mix makeup to
look good. This helped me be a great sales person because I could help
people accentuate certain features,” she said.
“As I
grew and climbed up the career ladder, I wanted to know who was behind
the makeup on the screen, so I went back to school at Make-up Designory
{in New York} and got a Master’s programme,” she explains.
She gained experience in different retail segments as well as being a special effects makeup artist in Hollywood.
“I
worked on different skin tones, I understood how they started doing
makeup, that inspired me and I was like let me dare to make my own
products,” she said.
She thought it would be an easy job but quickly realised how expensive it was.
She thought it would be an easy job but quickly realised how expensive it was.
This
made her rethink her initial model. At the time, there were several
companies doing branding, making the process easier, as all one had to
do was pick various products from the ready-made collection.
“The only problem I ran into was that the chemists were not listening,” she said.
“Women
of colour need colour, we need to do climatically adjustable products.
They were like what? And they completely refused, they said that black
people don’t buy makeup. At first I got offended but realised the reason
why black women did not buy was that no one was making products for us
so why would we buy something that no one was making any for us,” she
explains.
Jacque began her search for a chemist she could work with to make products for women of colour.
Most product lines available in the market offered only a one or two colours for the dark-skinned women.
The
onset of social media and entry of product lines for colour cosmetics
has increased awareness and created demand for the products especially
in Africa.
Partnering with Lintons, Jacque Mgido
Cosmetics was made locally available from last month, joining brands
such as Black Opal, Black Up and Maybelline among others that cater for
black skin tones.
“When I started doing makeup in
Hollywood that was my biggest thing, special effects to see how you can
turn a person into one thing and then into beauty,” said Jacque.
Her
first store was in Zimbabwe, with a few pop-up stores in South Africa.
Kenya, was a market she was interested to venture into, but was unsure
of how to do it.
As fate would have it, managing director of Lintons Beauty World, Dr Joyce Gikunda’s son had mentioned Jacque’s line to her.
“I told him we did not have space, but he insisted,” said Dr Gikunda.
A
meeting was set up and Jacque armed with her slides for a presentation
met Dr Gikunda in her home, and what was supposed to be an intense
corporate meeting ended up as a laid-back chat where she gave her story
and that of her brand.
The line initially known as
Vault Cosmetics was later renamed and it is now a full range including
foundation, concealer, powder, eye shadow, a water proof brow pencil,
just to name a few.
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