Another L’Oréal asset, Essie, was created by Essie Weingarten. In 1981, she took her life savings of $10,000 and had 12 colors made at a lab to put together little kits to send to salons. Within a year, the Essie brand was in 10,000 U.S. salons, and a year later it distributed internationally. At the time of its acquisition by L’Oréal in 2010, annual sales were $28 million. England’s Queen Elizabeth II wears Essie’s Ballet Slippers polish. “Not bad for a little girl from Queens,” Essie said.
Kat Von D is an American tattoo artist and reality TV star. In 2008, her namesake line launched at Sephora, with products that are 100% vegan and cruelty-free. Like Arden, Rubinstein and Lauder, Von D personally tests the formulas and has a direct hand in the packaging design and layouts for the Sephora signage.
Amy Risley, founder of SkinFix, comes from a beauty family — her father worked in manufacturing at Estée Lauder. As a kid, she was fascinated with ingredients and what was in each formula. She worked for L’Oréal and Jo Malone before she met the great, great granddaughter of Thomas Dixon, the pharmacist creator of SkinFix healing balm, and later bought the brand. She now works with dermatologists, naturopaths and holistic chemists to develop skin care that is consciously clean and clinically proven to work.
K-Beauty is one of the hottest trends to hit the market in the last three years and shows no sign of slowing down. While most beauty consumers have tried or at least heard of K-Beauty products, they probably don’t know that one person — Alicia Yoon — is responsible for bringing most of them to the U.S. market.
The CEO of K-Beauty brand Peach & Lily, Yoon also is an esthetician and a leader in the Korean skin care industry. In 2017, the brand was added to Target’s lineup.
It’s amazing and inspirational what these women have accomplished with creative innovation and entrepreneurial perseverance. As a female entrepreneur myself, I can’t wait to see who’s next.