Welcome back to Haul of Fame, your must-read beauty roundup for new products, new ideas and new makeup influencers: NBA players.
Included in todayâs issue: Benefit Cosmetics, Blue Lagoon, Cocolab, Decorté, Dr. Dennis Gross, Eadem, Fenty, Glossier, MAC Cosmetics, Murad, Nyx, Obagi, Omnilux, Osea, Ouai, Parfums de Marly, Pat McGrath Labs, Paul Mitchell, Paul Reacts, Redken, Saie, Saint Jane, Sol de Janeiro, Sol Labs, Tarte, 5 Sens and Hello Kittyâs bikini beauty routine.
But firstâ¦
A few minutes after therapy, I opened my phone for some more immediate mental health care: A TikTok video of a woman making her own shampoo from onions. Her name is Ify Ekwelem, and sheâs a holistic healer based in West Africa. In a lulling tone, Ekwelem narrates tiny videos about DIY beauty routines made from kitchen staples â an olive oil âbum scrub,â a lemon juice and baking soda deodorant paste. She boasts a few hundred thousand followers on platforms like Facebook and Instagram, but by far, her most viral content is this onion shampoo video, which counts over 1.5 million views and 20,000 shares on TikTok alone. Sheâs joined by a young woman in Mexico named Geneva who has 4.5 million views on her similar recipe.
By TikTok standards, this video shouldnât âwork.â The majority are just close-ups of a plain plastic bottle with a few loops of red onion and some cinnamon. Nobody is wearing a teeny Brandy Melville camisole and talking to you like a homeroom flirt. There isnât any choreography. Itâs just a straight-up example of ancestral knowledge transformed into cheerful, anyone-can-do-this service content.
In this way, the onion shampoo video is brilliant. Itâs also an example of whatâs coming next â or what could come next, if tariffs and stock swings keep scaring shoppers away. In every moment of economic panic, there is a DIY beauty boom. After 9/11, we saw the emergence of at-home manicure kits enter the luxury space, a trend led by Rescue Beauty lounge owner Ji Baek. In 2008, the collision of big bank freakouts and YouTube curiosity led to extreme contouring, âbaking,â and other makeup tricks cribbed from drag queens and your old babysitter who went on to work at MAC. The lockdowns of 2020 caused a skincare explosion where being a â12 stepperâ connoted an at-home serum routine.
Weâre seeing the DIY push now with haircare. Onion shampoo has a 70 percent spike in Google searches since May of last year. Thereâs also the #ricewater trend, a Tiktok situation with half a billion views (?!) where girls boil a pot of rice, leave the water sitting overnight, then douse their hair in it. And heatless curling techniques can happen with socks ($1.99) when needed. Obviously, you can buy elevated versions of this stuff. Fable and Mane uses onion juice in its top-rated $48 ayurvedic shampoo and conditioner set; Oribe and Augustinus Bader employ rice extracts in their best-selling hair care formulas, which retail for between $50 and $90. For soft and bouncy curls, the Shark Beauty dryer is a $200 marvel. But when you can pull off a beauty look without really buying anything, you feel like youâre getting away with something. And in a world where creators of colour have been suppressed by various algorithms, seeing holistic formulas from South America, Africa and India triumph on Tiktok has an additional grace note. But even if the systemic subtext isnât part of oneâs personal beauty equation, adopting these home remedies, one can feel more resourceful. That isnât exactly the same as powerful, but itâs closer than just pretty.
You can buy all these DIY hair ingredients â even the cheap socks â at any big supermarket or big box store. In a sense, itâs the beginning of the Pretty Preppers movement, where a âmake-doâ ethos supersedes our belief in financial safety nets, but not in basic beauty standards. Considering our prestige TV calendar has just swapped the wealth-porn paradise of White Lotus for the apocalyptic root network of The Last of Us, and the gilded magic of Wicked has given way to the underworld hypnosis of Sinners, itâs not entirely a surprise. Perhaps itâs a relief. Visibility is the closest thing we have to currency right now, especially since our actual currency is having a more volatile moment. And if you can be seen for your practical knowledge instead of your eerily symmetrical smile, some would consider that progress. You, dear readers, are likely too cynical to embrace that ethos wholesale. But at least youâll consider it a change in your market strategy.
What else is newâ¦
Skincare
Itâs literally captivating. Obagiâs Retinol + PHA Refining Night Cream has âentrappedâ its retinol for a longer release period, which allegedly reduces skin sensitivity and prolongs the whole âless wrinklesâ situation. It hit shelves on May 5 and retails for $135.
Double cleanse? They donât know her. Osea launched its Ocean Wave Cleanser on May 6, and itâs meant to be both a makeup remover and a pore cleanser, all in one bottle for $38. Nobodyâs mad.
Plant mucus is a thing now. On May 6, Saint Jane debuted Rich Rescue Phyto Mucin Cream, a tube of hydrating goo made with mucin proteins derived from yam roots. The cream retails for $48 and claims to boost skin elasticity and volume.
Omnilux is one of those gizmo brands that straps a Friday the Thirteenth hockey mask on you, then floods it with LED light to mimic the effects of a laser facial at home. On May 6, the Napa Valley-based brand alerted press that you can now buy the $395 gadget on a payment plan.
Old: Swiping on Bumble matches. Now: Swiping on self-tanner. On May 9, Dr. Dennis Gross dropped Alpha Beta Glow Pads, a range of pre-soaked wipes loaded with face and body self-tanner. Theyâre $48; a Sephora exclusive.
Blue Lagoon wants to make summer clothes for your skin. On May 8, the brand introduced BL+ The Cream Light, a âwarm weather moisturiserâ made with a less dense formula. Itâs got microalgae in the formula, and you know what that means â pondscum alert!
Is TikTok Shop a development or a retail site? Murad will find out. After its Deep Relief acne treatment went viral this winter, the doctor-fronted brand developed a whole new product â Biome-Balancing Clear & Prevent Acne Treatment Serum â to launch exclusively on TikTok Shop starting May 8. Itâll hit Murad.com two weeks later.
On May 7, Japanese luxury skincare brand Decorté introduced Sun Shelter, an SPF 50+ formula with rosemary extract and aloe. Itâs $42 and found at the Big Three â Bloomingdaleâs, Nordstrom and Saks.
Makeup
Itâs a bronzer! Itâs an SPF! Itâs a wrinkle treatment! Itâs $36. Sol Labs debuted Lumibronze, its new 3-in-one sun serum, on May 2, in three shades.
Tarteâs latest Maracuja extension: A Juicy Lip Tattoo product that stains lips with âno pain and no regrets.â The dual-ended colour tint costs $29 and comes in five shades of âyes, great, Iâll have that.â
Glow-La-La is the newest Benefit Cosmetics compact. The powder highlighter launched on March 5 with six shades including Raya, a luminescent pale peach. Itâs a tiny indication that dating apps are declining â four years ago, if you named anything âRaya,â you would have had to make a joke about swiping with Ben Affleck.
Ellie the Elephant is gonna dance to âUmbrella (Ella, Ella).â On May 7, Fenty Beauty announced a partnership with the New York Liberty. Fenty founder Rihanna says, âWeâre excited for them to get their game faces on.â Does that mean weâll see you courtside, Ri? Fingers crossed! Bring the kids!
Saie Beauty had three Dew Blush shades â Lady (mauve), Hottie (peach) and Flirty (pink) â hitting shelves on May 7. Theyâre $25 each. Rather put pink on your lips? Eademâs Guava Fresca gloss also hit May 7.
Glossierâs new campaign stars Katseye, the K-pop group birthed on Netflix and brought to cutie-pie life by revered creative director Humberto Leon. Did I report in 2024 that a beauty brand should scoop them up? I did, though to be honest, Iâm surprised that a label as big â and as Millennial-driven â as Glossier would be the one to do it. Still, great. Now we just need justice for Emily Kelavos!!!
Blurred lips for less. On May 9, Nyx launched Smushy Matte Lip Balm, a 12-shade range with a chubby font, a $9 price tag and a lot of dessert-scented formulas named for cakes and pies.
Hair Care
Paul Mitchell debuted its Clear Collection on May 2. The line for extra-sensitive skin includes shampoo, conditioner, smoothing serum and styling âglaze,â each with 10 ingredients or less.
Ouai introduced a Thickening Spray on May 6 that doubles as a heat protectant and smells like ginger, basil and tomato leaves. (Your move, Loewe.)
Fragrance
Lychee is gaining steam in the gourmand wars. On May 6, Cocolab introduced Lychee Breeze as its new flavor for Cocoshine and Cocofloss.
Wear âem and weep? On May 6, fragrance brand 5 Sens, founded by Wander Beautyâs Divya Gugnani, launched Happy Tears, an orange blossom and jasmine fragrance that claims to be âserotonin in a spritz.â IDK though â my bottle of Lexapro is free with insurance, and this stuff is $65.
Paul Reacts is a TikTok channel where a dude smells perfumes and tells you if theyâre good. On May 8, the brand debuted its own scent, Strawberry Sensation, a $65 formula with vanilla and sandalwood. The press release says the scent âisnât a dupe or riffâ and namechecks strawberry motifs from Rhode, Glossier and â wild card â Simone Rocha as proof of concept. (But the real proof is whether this thing sells.)
Met Gala Learnings
Parfums de Marly would like its red carpet callouts, please. The French label spritzed Tyla and Joey King with its hair scents and even secured quotes from their stylists (Yusef Williams and Rena Calhoun, respectively) to reinforce the message. Expect more #ad attempts like this in the future, especially with Cannes coming up.
Sol de Janeiro also dipped its toe into the celebrity space, lathering up the model Paloma Elsesser in body oil and Bum Bum Cream.
Meanwhile, menâs grooming went big on the carpet, with Avène Eau Thermale, MAC Cosmetics, Nyx, Pat McGrath Labs, Redken and Vaseline getting their spotlight via male celebs like Lewis Hamilton, Shaboozey and Law Roach (whose matched his Vaseline partnership to a blue-and-gold crocodile Hermés Kelly).
And finallyâ¦
The K-Beauty brand Amuse launched its Hello Kitty collaboration on May 2. To celebrate, they gave the beloved cartoon a tan. If Hello Kitty had a mouth, sheâd be laughing so hard right nowâ¦
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