What began as the side business of a
single mother became a flourishing cosmetics company with a proud message. Taking
a spin on look and meaning, Beauty
Bakerie creates distinct dessertlike products and strives to provide for all
skin colors on the spectrum – especially those on the darker end. This
"passion project" was initially a labor of love and creative outlet
for Cashmere Nicole Carillo, founder and CEO of the now over 5-million-dollar
company. However, her journey to commercial success was far from sweet.
There were no shortcuts for Carillo.
As a young mother, she depended on food stamps and daycare assistance after
becoming pregnant in high school. Despite the challenge, she made it through
college and nursing school while maintaining a small beauty business on the
side. When faced with a breast cancer diagnosis ten years later, she fought the
disease and underwent surgery while maintaining the fledgling business. Later after
her treatment, the time spent educating herself on consumer safety came in
handy when she devised her line of nontoxic, cruelty-free, vegan products, and
the years of spending free time dreaming up product designs helped shape a
successful reality.
While Carillo changed the look of
makeup products with her packaging style, she went beyond simply superficial
appearance by providing an array of shade ranges, proving diversity in the
industry was as commercially feasible as it was necessary. As a creator, Carillo
sought a deeper, more thoughtful perspective into the needs of her customers,
and that depth was key to her ability to create something meaningful to so
many. She followed her advice to really listen to what the clientele has to say,
and her heightened awareness of the challenges nonwhite customers faced when
shopping for makeup moved her to create a solution. While paying attention to
feedback is crucial for a creator to best fulfill exigencies in their domains, Carillo
had no trouble putting herself into her customers' shoes. Herself a woman of
color, her own experiences led her to identify a critical feature missing in
the cosmetics industry: diversity. Though she was light-skinned, she still had
trouble finding makeup shades that matched her complexion - and an even harder
time finding products for her daughter, whose skin was darker than hers. She
utilized her personal experience and those of her customers well, as Beauty Bakerie not only makes
products like foundations available in thirty shades but orders the colors in
order of darkest to lightest, furthering Carillo's message of inclusivity. In
an industry that so often forgets to include such colors, let alone number them
first, it is a uniquely powerful statement. However, Carillo doesn't consider
this shift from the status quo a radical one, as she claims she is simply
"normalizing it. It isn’t genius. I’m making this brand look like how the
world looks. It is diverse […and] we will knock down walls and make the world a
sweeter place together."
Defying
the status quo is a predictably common trait among creatives throughout
history. One does not have to be in the flashy world of commerce and beauty to
catch mainstream attention and success; Albert Einstein was an innovator from
an entirely different realm and era but nonetheless made history for breaking
convention. Creative people often find solutions by adjusting the questions
that are being asked. In Creative Minds,
Howard Gardner writes that such people accomplish this by searching for “basic
understandings unhampered by conventional delineations of a question” (10). In
the 21st century, convention used to mean women of color could
expect to leave a Sephora with any products but those that matched their skin, but
thanks to pioneers like Carillo, they can finally feel like every other makeup
shopper. Einstein “was able to effect a breakthrough precisely because he did not simply accept as given the paradigms
and agendas of the physics of his time” (9). Evidently, what made him different
wasn’t just his intellect, but his defiance of accepted ideas and doggedness in
the pursuit of his own. Likewise, Cashmere Nicole Carillo – mother, cancer
survivor, and woman extraordinaire, certainly doesn’t plan on sticking to any
agenda but her own.
Sources:
Creating Minds by Howard Gardner
Cashmere Nicole Carillo seems like an overall inspiring individual! I love that she used her own experiences and talents to fill a need she saw in the community. I also think ordering the colors from darker shades to lighter shades is a subtle way to share a strong, positive message to those with darker skin. To me, that small decision speaks volumes about the importance of inclusivity to Carillo.
ReplyDeleteCarillo strikes me as someone who has experienced a lot of adversity throughout her life. From being diagnosed with cancer to depending on food stamps, she fought through this and created a unique company. I love that she is motivated by a desire to create products that are more inclusive to people of color.
ReplyDeleteI admire Carillo's perseverance not only to make a name for her brand, but also to do this while enduring such hardships. Growing a business while your physical health is declining demonstrates her passion for her product and ability to overcome adversity. I think passion is such an important intrinsic motivator for her business and her recovery. This drive to create a solution for a problem that she and thousands of other nonwhite makeup enthusiasts face is truly inspirational; thank you for sharing this amazing woman!
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