Thursday 4th of June 2026

Nairobi, Kenya

Beyonce Knowles Beauty and Look’s At The Grammy Awards

Beyonce’s Beauty Look Shut Down the Grammys 3 dresses same occasion,her theme was inspired by Black Panther movie check out this photos from last night Grammy Awards 2018 best moment for Queen Bey,Evy Blue and Mr Carter.

Beyonce Knowles for nearly two decades,has been an indomitable force at the Grammy Awards. From commanding the red carpet with her chameleonic beauty to her mic-drop moments onstage, the 20-time golden gramophone winner has left her mark on every ceremony she’s attended. And with Queen Bey up for Best/Rap Collaboration for “Family Feud” alongside husband Jay Z, who leads the nominees with eight nods, 2018 is bound to be no different. So what better time to revisit the megastar’s most unforgettable looks? Though very much in sync with her Destiny’s Child bandmates as she made her Grammys debut in 2000, Bey was a standout from the start with her fresh glow and cascade of honey-streaked waves. But it’s when she struck out as a solo artist that she really came into her own.

During her 2007 performance of “Listen,” the stunning ballad she sang in her film Dreamgirls, she looked every bit the screen siren with taupe smoky eyes and an ivory floral hair ornament affixed in her long, glossy waves. In 2008, she went blonde and chopped a few inches off her signature mane for a cool, shoulder-grazing length that showed of her décolleté and sculpted arms to powerful effect. And in 2014, Bey really made jaws drop when she, with her drenched curly chop and rock solid post-baby figure, and Jay Z opened the show performing their smash single “Drunk in Love.”

Content Courtesy Of Nairobi Fashion Hub & Vogue Magazine 

Grammy’s Awards 2018 Red Carpet Fashion Moment for Best Dressed Artist

Best moment at the Grammy awards 2018 red carpet

Grammy Awards 60th event for the first time in 15 years left the West Coast behind staging the 60th annual event in New York City at Madison Square Garden on January 28th

This year’s outfits might be making more of an impact than ever before as a number of celebrities don white roses in support of #TimesUp to protest sexual misconduct.
In light of the Golden Globes, which saw almost every attendee wearing black in honour of the movement, the garish looks from the Grammys of yore may be a thing of the past as this year’s guests channel muted tones and minimalistic silhouettes.

Cardi B spoke with Billboard’s Chelsea Briggs on the red carpet at Clive Davis’ Pre-Grammy Gala on Saturday (Jan. 27) about being nominated for two Grammys and performing with Bruno Mars at the awards show, her engagement to Migos’ Offset and her favorite JAY-Z song.

“It means a lot,” Cardi B says of her Grammy nods. “It just makes you forget every bad thing or every little bullshit that you go through in the industry or every little comment that people try to put you down, and it’s just like it doesn’t matter because it’s like, I’m in the Grammys.”
“This week, whatever people say about me, it doesn’t even matter, because it’s like, I’m here at the Grammys,” she adds.

Content Courtesy Of Nairobi Fashion Hub, Getty Images & Grammy Awards

House Of Tayo

House of Tayo is a fashion design firm from Rwanda founder by Matthew Rugamba is the Founder and Creative Director, Matthew Rugamba

House Of Tayo Philosophy

“At House of Tayo, we have a passion for storytelling, and our brand through both lifestyle and fashion provides an opportunity for us to use design, media, clothing, and accessories to tell African stories. At House of Tayo, we are innovators propelled by tradition, historians that publish on cloth, and designers who combine African heritage with more contemporary designs and concepts. ”

About House Of Tayo
House of Tayo was created out of the desire to find a unique way through which to showcase African sophistication, style, and flavor through contemporary, locally-made clothing and accessories. With style influences ranging from the Motown era to traditional British tailoring, House of Tayo seeks to combine elegance and class with a strong sense of African heritage and iconography.

We are a distinctly Rwandan-born brand that works with local artisans and tailors and in doing so we support the local community by providing stable income and employment opportunities.
With its unconventional combination of colors and patterns, the brand is bold and futuristic; edgy, yet sophisticated; and reflective of the current proliferation of African arts, culture, and style on the world stage. The brand is truly authentic and homegrown, utilizing African textiles and fabrics, and produced by Rwandan tailors and artisans.

House Of Tayo History Africa Fashion Week London is one of the biggest, most bustling fashion events across Europe. It’s attended by at least 20,000 people and filled with back-to-back runway shows, colorful exhibitor stalls, and lavish food from hip restaurants. Over two days, 50 of the world’s best emerging and established designers showcase their African-inspired designs. Last summer, 23-year-old Matthew Rugamba was one of them. At the finale of the fashion show for his label, House of Tayo, Rugamba walked down the runway to applause and cheers. It was a surreal moment. How had he gotten here? he wondered.

He was going into his senior year at Lewis & Clark, where he was majoring in international affairs. Yet here he was, in London, during the Olympics, displaying colorful bow ties and snoods (circular scarves) he’d made from traditional African fabrics. He gazed at the approving crowd.

More than 1,000 attendees including London fashionistas, style bloggers, and Financial Times, and BBC reporters watched the young entrepreneur expectantly. He’d prepped for this moment by studying YouTube videos of famous designers closing their fashion shows. Now, at his own, he stood overwhelmed, forgetting what to do. “I think I bowed,” he says.

It was a rare moment of indecision for Rugamba, whose resolve, style, and drive have already captured the attention of the fashion world. Born in west London, Rugamba moved to Uganda, his father’s homeland, before he was six years old.

After attending primary school in Uganda for several years, Rugamba and his family relocated to his mother’s homeland of Rwanda. From there, he moved on to boarding school in Kenya, where he was active in sports and music. He later enrolled in Swaziland’s prestigious Waterford United World College as a Davis United World College Scholar.
While researching U.S. colleges and universities, Rugamba happened on Lewis & Clark and was particularly impressed with its small class sizes. “I didn’t want to go somewhere and be a statistic,” he says. “It was important to me to interact in the classroom.” His high school friends in Africa told him to get used to being in a classroom where his race would put him in the minority. Rugamba was undeterred. He looked forward to interacting with his Lewis & Clark peers and creating opportunities for mutual growth.

For Rugamba, being away from home was nothing new; he was already a world traveler. But his classes at Lewis & Clark challenged his thinking in terms of both what he learned and how he learned it. Courses like Introduction to International Affairs, taught by Professor Bob Mandel, taught him not to take information at face value. He quickly learned that it was okay and, in fact, encouraged to ask questions and challenge professors.

While the small classes allowed him to put up his hand, his accent made people look up from their laptops. If the subject of Africa arose, all heads turned toward him. Prior to Lewis & Clark, he’d always been surrounded by people from his country. In Oregon, he picked up a new role: Africa ambassador. “People didn’t know much about the country I consider home, Rwanda especially in terms of its everyday life,” he says. At one point, he considered claiming he was from Uganda instead of Rwanda due to its troubled history of genocide, but he reconsidered. “I had to stand up for where I’m from.

I wanted to show people the amazing things coming out of Africa.” This led Rugamba, always a dapper presence on campus, to a decision. He’d combine his eye for fashion with his desire to share the stories of Africa. Wax print fabrics originated in Indonesia. The Dutch brought them to Africa’s Gold Coast, and the bold geometric prints spread throughout the continent.

In Africa, Rugamba explains, prints tell a story beyond looking beautiful. Their colors contain meanings that vary by country. In Ghana, yellow represents gold, but in Uganda it symbolizes sunshine. Green might stand for culture or prosperity. “If there’s a new king or president, you will see it expressed in the fabric,” he says. Matthew is always engaged, innovative, and very ‘there’ in whatever he is doing. He’s got this laser focus that’s going to make him very successful.

George Austinadjunct instructor in Rhetoric and Media Studies In the summer of 2011, after his sophomore year, his friend Hope Seery CAS ’13 visited Rugamba in Rwanda. One afternoon, they flagged down motorcycle taxis and headed to a bustling marketplace in Kigali. “Matthew asked if we could stop by a tailor’s, so off we went,” remembers Seery.

“As we waded through piles of African wax prints, neatly stacked from floor to ceiling, Matthew explained his idea for a fashion line. Until that point, I thought we were there to get his suit hemmed!” Rugamba chose a few prints and took them to a local seamstress “a woman in an alleyway with a single sewing machine,” says Seely.

“Matthew and the seamstress discussed design plans, and she told us to come back in three days. When we returned, she revealed House of Tayo’s first set of snoods and bowties.

They were beautiful!” While bow ties may seem old-fashioned, Rugamba begs to differ.

During his junior year, he interned at the National Endowment for Democracy as part of Lewis & Clark’s Off-Campus Study Program in Washington, D.C. While there, he eschewed the conventional intern dress code of white shirts and blue ties and instead wore his colorful bow ties. “I’m drawn to bow ties,” he says.

“They say ‘prestige.’ You think of professors, special occasions. There’s an element of respect.” Rugamba refers to his style as “Afro-Dandyism,” a nod to an elegant style he developed during his years in boarding school. “Wearing uniforms tests your individuality you’re supposed to look the same, but you can still develop ways to express your style subtly,” he says. “Some students would knot their ties thinner or thicker. Others would change their shoelaces.

Those details make you pay attention.” Tradition inspires Rugamba. “I like things that look good, but my ability to embrace fashion comes out of linking it to art, history, and culture.

Take British tailoring. People go to the same Savile Row tailor for 50 years. When fashion becomes linked to tradition and history, it becomes a lot more than just looking good,” Rugamba says. “I look at old pictures of my grandfather and father and think, ‘If I wore those clothes today, they would still be cool.’” Inspiration also came from his family in naming the company.

“My grandfather and uncle’s names were both Matthew, but my uncle went by ‘Matayo.’ When I was born, they called me ‘Tayo.’” During his junior year at Lewis & Clark, Rugamba designed a logo and started dedicating himself to developing the House of Tayo brand all while maintaining a full course load.

He set up Twitter, Tumblr, and Facebook accounts for his business. And while he was interning in Washington, D.C., he had one of his friends take photos for the line. Rugamba didn’t have any models, so he was in all the pictures. A fashion blogger saw his Tumblr site and asked to interview him. During the interview, the blogger asked what advice Rugamba had for emerging designers.

Rugamba burst out laughing: he was one of them, too. Lewis & Clark has given me the confidence to push forward with an idea, no matter how abstract or crazy it may have first seemed.

Matthew Rugamba CAS ‘13 But not for long. Online traffic brought him more followers, feedback, requests, and publicity. Northwestern University flew Rugamba to Chicago for a fashion show. Then, in the spring of 2012, Africa Fashion Week London tweeted him: Was he interested in doing a show over the summer The strong response to House of Tayo comes as no surprise to those who know Rugamba. “Matthew is always engaged, innovative, and very ‘there’ in whatever he is doing,” says George Austin, an adjunct instructor in Rhetoric and Media Studies who led Rugamba’s Washington, D.C., program.

“He’s got this laser focus that’s going to make him very successful.” Rugamba is quick to credit Lewis & Clark for his liberal arts education and encouraging his development of the House of Tayo. “I’ve been able to explore different interests and aspects of my personality that I wouldn’t have been able to do elsewhere,” he says. “Lewis & Clark has given me the confidence to push forward with an idea, no matter how abstract or crazy it may have first seemed.” Things at House of Tayo do get crazy.

Any money Rugamba makes from selling his items goes toward making the next ones. His current priority is getting the word out about the brand, as well as juggling school, meeting social responsibilities, and teaching himself design. He is also participating in Lewis & Clark’s new entrepreneurship venture competition with teammates Wade Higgins CAS ‘13 and Anthony Ruiz CAS ‘13. All that can be physically draining, especially when people focus only on the industry’s glamour.

“It’s not like, ‘Champagne!’ ‘Models!’” he says. “It’s hard work.” After graduation, Rugamba plans to return to Rwanda to expand his accessories line. His products have always been made in Rwanda, and he wants to continue to support local artisans and businesses in his home country. It took time to believe in himself. “In the beginning, I didn’t think I had credibility,” he says.

“It took me a while to call myself a designer. I hadn’t paid my dues or been to fashion school. But the show in London … that was validation.” Rugamba says he started the House of Tayo “to share the best of Africa.” But it’s also about something more personal: “Having an appreciation of where I come from and pride in my heritage.”

Content Courtesy Of House Of  Tayo and Nairobi Fashion Hub

Adidas Originals Revives adicolor Apparel Franchise in SS18

adidas is bringing back its most iconic apparel franchise, adicolor, for SS18 adidas Originals revives adicolor, its most iconic apparel franchise. Cultivated in the 70’s, the range is an instantly recognizable symbol of sports and street culture which returns in 2018 remastered for the present with the confidence to playfully celebrate color for a new generation – never afraid to poke fun at itself. Pairing the colours from the past with those of today, four meaningful adidas sport hues were carefully selected as the starting point for the overall inspiration for both Men’s and Women’s SS18 collections.

The primary colours which are now referred to as Bluebird, Fairway Green, Scarlett Red and Sun Yellow were first seen in 1983, when all-white adicolor shoes were presented alongside a set of felt-tip pens, and reappeared in 2006 for Color Series, an adidas collaboration with some of the world’s best-known and most highly regarded creatives, creating unique pieces around a specific colour.

Adidas Adicolor SS18 Collections

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Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 2018 Returns for 5th Edition 

As Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 2018 celebrates five outstanding years in Nigeria, the fashion week has over the years successfully built a platform for emerging and renowned fashion designers in Africa to showcase exquisite and creative pieces depicting our African heritage and culture through fashion.

This year’s theme – “African Heritage Arise” intend to show reflective contemporary and versatile African pieces that tell a story of our heritage and the pride that comes with being an African. The beauty of our textiles have changed beyond the conventional era of simplicity in fashion to paving the way for more creative, colourful and modernistic styles that appeal not just to the older more traditional people but young people all over the world.

 

Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 2018 Now Open for Submission

AFWN’s objective has remained to create an enabling platform across the globe where creative African designers and fashion entrepreneurs can showcase the beauty and creativity of Africa through their designs and costumes, this year’s fashion week will also look to celebrate young African entrepreneurs who have mastered the art of fashion by using it to make bold statements and create more versatility in their designs and brands. This year’s edition will feature talented and creative designers from various African countries ready to showcase their exquisite pieces on the runway. AFWN 2018 will also open its doors to models from all over Africa. Africa Fashion Week Nigeria date will be announced soon.

African Fashion Week Nigeria is calling up for Designers and Exhibitors

Interested Designers/Exhibitors should kindly send request for designers’ pack – curator@africafashionweeknigeria.com
For more information and Sponsorship, send a mail to info@africafashionweeknigeria.com
IG: @afwnigeria
FB: AfricaFashionWeekNigeria
Twitter: @AfricaFWNigeria
Website: www.africafashionweeknigeria.com

Content Courtesy Nairobi Fashion Hub and Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 

 

SAGA Awards 2018 Red Carpet Fashion Best Dressed 

There were intricate beaded elements and beautiful moments, but the ladies of the red carpet looked fierce,it was a stylish night to remember! we give you some highlight from last night Saga Awards 2018 Red Carpet best moments.
Lupita Nyong’o
Wearing shimmering and feathered Ralph & Russo.
Yara Shahidi
Wearing a black strapless Ralph Lauren Collection jumpsuit with a bow train.
Halle Berry
In beaded Pamella Roland.
Mary J. Blige
Wearing a black and white Jean Louis Sabaj gown accessorized with David Webb earrings and rings
Uzo Aduba
Wearing an ethereal one-shouldered white gown with Chopard earrings and rings.
Adrienne C. Moore
In a structured navy gown.
Selenis Leyva
Wearing a nude beaded gown.
Niecy Nash
Wearing a green gown with embellishment at the arms.
Susan Kelechi Watson
Wearing a blue sateen Rubin Singer gown.
Marsai Martin
Wearing a belted wine gown with a full bodice and sheer neckline.
Danielle Brooks
Wearing red and black sequined Marc Bouwer.
Samira Wiley
In a celestial Tadashi Shoji.
Sydelle Noel
Wearing a yellow gown with structured detailing.
Ryan Michelle Bathe
Wearing an ivory Gemy Maalouf gown with a beaded bodice.

 

Ugandan Model Aketch Joy Winnie Singed By Fusion Model Management

The South African Model based agency has recently singing East Africa Models,Fusion Model has several Ugandan Models

Aketch Joy Winnie she the newest from east africa She is on away to South Africa to jump start her international modeling career as a fashion model after signing with Fusion Model Management Cape Town. Joram Muzira is the proprietor of Joram Model Management took to social media to share the news.

   Aketch Joy Winnie

Black Panther Film Costume Inspired By Maasai, Tuareg & Ndebele Dress

Whats Fashion is a language which tells a story about the person who wears it. “Clothes create a wordless means of communication that we all understand,”

Black Panther film has showcased some of African best dress form different community in Africa, we have the best heritage in the world that we should be proud of meet the designer behind the best fashion costume in the world Ruth Carter

African Inspired Costume By Maasai, Tuareg & Ndebele Dress

About Ruth Carter

Ruth Carter has created costumes for some epic films, Amistad, Malcolm X and Selma among them, but nothing prepared her for the size and scope of Black Panther. For the super-stylish superhero film opening Feb. 12, she imagined a new African diaspora with 700 costumes fusing futurism, indigenous dress and high fashion, using research that spanned from the Rose Bowl Flea Market to textile dealers in Accra, Ghana.

The Ryan Coogler-directed film brings to the big screen Marvel Comics’ first black superhero, reinventing the circa 1966 character for today. Black Panther is depicted as T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman), who rules over the fantastical African country of Wakanda, rich with vibranium, a mythic metal that is woven into the superhero’s sleek black, repeating triangle-pattern suit (designed by Marvel’s Ryan Meinerding), and has allowed the population to make technological advances nearly a century ahead of the rest of the world. The fight for vibranium is at the heart of the story, with T’Challa defending the kingdom against Michael B. Jordan’s Erik Killmonger.

[taq_review]

Carter worked with five illustrators, 14 designers, mold makers, fabric dyers, jewelry makers and more. “It was an army,” the costume designer says. On her mood boards were images of African dress from the Maasai, Tuareg, Turkana, Xhosa, Zulu, Suri and Dinka peoples (including a men’s glass bead, animal skin and cowry shell corset from the Metropolitan Museum of Art), as well as piercings and body art, and more abstract examples of drapery and beading. She also examined fashion by avant-garde pleating master Issey Miyake, African-style vintage pieces by Yves Saint Laurent and Donna Karan.

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Why Dressing for Success Leads to Success

Dress better, work better?
A number of recent studies suggest that dressing up for work in a suit or blazer could do wonders for an employee’s productivity, whether going into a negotiation, making a sales call or even participating in a videoconference with business associates.
Using a number of measures, including simulated business meetings at which subjects wore formal and more casual clothing, the studies offer indications that wearing nicer clothes may raise one’s confidence level, affect how others perceive the wearer, and in some cases even boost the level of one’s abstract thinking, the type in which leaders and executives engage.
Michael W. Kraus, an assistant professor of organizational behavior at the Yale School of Management, co-wrote a study for the Journal of Experimental Psychology in 2014 which showed that clothes with high social status can increase dominance and job performance in “high-stakes” competitive tasks.
The study put 128 men ages 18 to 32 with diverse backgrounds and income levels through role-playing exercises—mock negotiations over the sale of a hypothetical factory—to see whether wearing specific kinds of clothing had an effect on the outcomes. The “buyer” in each case came from one of three groups. One group wore business suits and dress shoes. One group wore sweatpants, white T-shirts and plastic sandals. A third group, referred to as “neutrals,” kept wearing the clothing they arrived in. A neutral played the role of “seller” in each negotiation, but no seller also played a role as a buyer.

Suit up
The negotiators were each given a fair-market value for the hypothetical factory, along with other information that would influence their decisions about opening bids and asking prices. In the end, the suits proved much less willing to concede ground during the negotiations, moving off their initial offer by an average of only $830,000, compared with $2.81 million for those in sweatpants and $1.58 million for the neutrals.
What these results show, Prof. Kraus says, is that in competitive, winner-take-all situations, wearing more formal attire can send others a signal “about you being successful and real confident in whatever you’re doing.” Those more casually dressed, on the other side of the table, tend to back down more easily, he says. The ones in formal attire become aware of the respect they are receiving and become more forceful as well, he says.
Other research suggests that the effects of wearing nice clothes can be as much internal as external.
In a study published last year in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science, results suggested that people engage in higher levels of abstract thinking when they dress up, compared with when they dress casually. When some 361 participants were asked to complete tasks, the ones dressed more formally engaged in the kinds of abstract thinking that someone in a position of power, like a senior executive, would deploy. After being tested in both formal and casual dress, another 88 subjects were quicker to see the big picture when they dressed more formally. The casual dressers tended to sweat the small stuff.

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A H&M advert 

A H&M advert starring a young boy wearing a ‘coolest monkey in the jungle’ slogan has been criticized around the world, what it done intentional or was it a just Innocent advert gone wrong?

H&M ad not the only fashion campaign to court controversy -five other brands that blundered Swedish fast-fashion giant, last week found itself in hot soup over ‘coolest monkey in the jungle ’ ad, but they are not alone alone in dropping boomshell in in an advertising campaign – just ask the following brands they know it better than anyone else
Here are so of the top brands that have been accused of the sensitive blunders in adverts

1.Jimmy Choo

2.Dolce & Gabbana

3.Evisu

4.Yves Saint Laurent

5.Victoria’s Secret

Celebrities joined the public outcry, none louder than Canadian singer The Weeknd, who collaborated with H&M on two collections in 2017.
H&M (Hennes & Mauritz) is under fire for using a black child to model a sweatshirt sporting the phrase “coolest monkey in the jungle.”

The image first appeared over the weekend on the British version of the Swedish-based retailer’s website.
Upon noticing an advertisement with the photo, social media users erupted in outrage at H&M for what they deemed to be a racist and inconsiderate move.
American percussionist Questlove was one to chime in, writing on Instagram (where he has over 1 million followers):
As of Monday morning, H&M had removed the ad from its website, a spokesperson told CNBC, but it continued to sell the hooded top online (although not in the U.S.).

“We sincerely apologise for offending people with this image of a printed hooded top,” a spokesperson told CNBC. “We believe in diversity and inclusion in all that we do and will be reviewing all our internal policies accordingly to avoid any future issues.”
This mishap adds to a growing list of retailers going too far with a slogan or imagery. Abercrombie & Fitch, for example, was criticised for selling a shirt depicting the Wong Brothers’ laundry service, where “two Wongs can make it white,” and “Get Your Buddha on the Floor.”
Urban Outfitters once sold a red sweatshirt bearing the Kent State name and what appeared to be a blood splatter. And Zara, owned by Inditex, stirred up controversy when it released a striped blue-and-white children’s pajama top with a yellow star over the left chest, resembling uniforms worn during the Holocaust.
The blunder for H&M comes right after the retailer in December reported its biggest drop in quarterly sales in at least a decade. In turn, H&M has trimmed back its expansion plans and is even considering closing some locations.

Content Courtesy Of Nairobi Fashion Hub & SCMP 

Penny Winter

Founded in 1997 by Irish designer Penny Winter, the brand’s handcrafted jewellery, made from ethically sourced, re purposed Ankole cow horn, brass, and other raw materials from Africa, is considered one of Kenya’s first sources of African accessories.

Winter started her career at the Royal Shakespeare Company and the English National Opera in London after her studies at the London College of Fashion, where she specialized in period costumes for plays.

After travelling to Kenya on a backpacking adventure she fell in love with the country, making it her permanent home in 1997.

An adventurer and explorer, Winter’s travels provide the perfect opportunity for sourcing interesting materials – whether it’s the downtown backstreets and alleyways of Nairobi, the ruby mines of Voi, the metalworks of Suswa, or the island of Lamu, Winter always takes away something that can later be seen in her designs.

With a designer’s eye, she handpicks uncut stones from genuine stone merchants – sapphires, rubies, tourmaline and opal – and turns it into unique pieces of art. Penny Winter has been featured in major publications such as Vogue, Vanity Fair, and Condé Nast Traveler, and has stockists both locally and abroad.

Content Courtesy Of  Penny Winter  & Nairobi Fashion Hub

Vault Beauty Products

Don’t ask for just one measly product this year: put a vault on your wish list! A beauty vault is a big collection of products that’s often limited edition. Some especially enticing choices come out during the holidays, so we curated a list of our favorite options. Whether you’re big on lipstick, skin care, or eye shadow, there’s something out there you’ll fall for. Take a look at these hot ticket packages and get them ASAP. They never stick around for long!

 

The holidays are all about indulgences. Consider the amount of mulled wine, cookies and eggnog we inhale during the season.
Guilty gastronomical gorges aside, the holidays are also for treating our loved ones to things they wouldn’t necessarily buy for themselves. If you want to bring some serious festive cheer to the beauty-obsessed on your list, consider giving makeup vaults this year.

Vaults aren’t simply your run-of-the-mill, limited-edition holiday beauty launches. They’re bigger and bolder than palettes and they even take beauty kits to the next level. Vaults are the splurge-worthy gift for someone who has been really, really good this year. (And you can include yourself in that.)

They often contain a huge selection of products, giving beauty lovers ample opportunities to experiment. With so many options, there’s no need to be concerned about choosing the most flattering colors because the vault likely includes them all. And beauty vaults don’t even require wrapping thanks to their chic packaging.

About Vault Cosmetics

Vault cosmetics founder, Jackie Mgido has her roots in Zimbabwe and has experienced the makeup challenges faced by the everyday woman in Sub-Saharan Africa. Jackie intentionally crafted Vault cosmetics with this forethought and focus. She has developed an extensive range of fresh formulas and stunning colors designed to give a natural look to anyone who dares to indulge in their image, beauty, and inner vault.

Vault cosmetics’ complete product line welcomes women of every age, creed, color. Vault also embodies the utmost in quality, distinction and integrity. Every product is hypoallergenic, fragrance free, allergy tested and non-comedegenic. Vault’s philosophy is not only to offer a great product but also to educate the consumer on the benefits of makeup and proper application techniques.

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