Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Brands Taking Boomers Back to Their Punk Roots

Welcome back to Haul of Fame, your must-read beauty roundup for new products, new ideas and so much salmon sperm. (Is a lox shortage imminent? Discuss.)

Included in today’s issue: Abib, Alex Cooper, Aprés Nail, Being Haircare, Billie, Bvlgari, Henry Rose, Knesko, Kylie Cosmetics, L’Oréal Paris, Lancer, Literie, Natasha Denona, Native, Ôrebella, Ogee, Olive & June, The Ordinary, Rael, R.e.m. Beauty, Saltair, Saje Natural Wellness, POV Beauty, Skin Laundry, Valentino Beauty, Wet Brush, YSL Beauty and Bella Swan vs. Bella Hadid.

But first…

Bright green hair is a teenage thing — at least, we all assume so. But this month, Manic Panic founders Tish and Snooky Bellomo realised with a jolt that their Instagram followers had spiked nearly 20 percent among people over 45. Meanwhile, some of the hair dye brand’s biggest points of online engagement came from men and women between 55 to 65, which skews far more Billie Joe Armstrong than Billie Eilish.

“There’s long been this unspoken expectation that at a certain age, we should just fade quietly into the scenery,” said Snooky. “But that’s never been the Manic Panic way.” Instead, the brand famous for Angela Chase’s red bob on My So Called Life and Clementine Kruczynski’s orange curls in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind leaned into the message with “Aging Disgracefully,” a curated collection of “amplified” dyes with 30 percent more pigment than the brand’s typical formulas, which look best on grey or white hair.

Neon tresses were once an office no-no for most professions. But after athleisure conquered the workplace — and anti-discrimination laws were more strictly enforced by HR departments — a few lilac streaks in the boardroom aren’t quite as unusual, especially in a hybrid work environment. Meanwhile, rainbow hair’s original fans — 1970s punks and 1990s teens — are now in their fifties, sixties and seventies, making them senior enough at work to buck convention, if they’re still showing up at the office altogether. “Generation X, the latchkey kids, the DIY masters, the ones who taught themselves how to thrive, grew up fast and learned early on to march to their own beat,” said Tish. “Then life happened. The Great Recession hit, responsibilities piled up, and many found themselves pushed into conformity by jobs, family, and the grind of survival.” One pandemic and several political lunatics later, Bellomo says her older shoppers are saying “f*** it” and returning to their neon roots.

L’Oréal’s Feria has added 50+ women to their boxes and web content and Bleach London, which began 15 years ago as a watering hole for youth culture, just added a bleach-free formula that can deposit its shocking blue and orange colours onto older hair without the same level of breakage. Founder Alex Brownsell has posted photos from the salon with Dame Vivienne Westwood, then 80, before her death. For vivid haircare brands and their marketing teams to pivot entirely to a 50+ customer would be unnecessary, but to leave them out of their messaging and imagery altogether would be leaving money on the vanity table, especially on platforms like Facebook and product placement opportunities on network TV, which still skew heavily older with audiences.

For example, this month on BritBox, a new BBC dramedy called “Riot Women” debuts. It follows a nascent punk band of women over 50 playing across West Yorkshire and discovering they’re louder — and perhaps more destined for the spotlight — than they ever knew. The show features actress Lorraine Ashbourne, 65, transforming her mop of grey hair into a purple-pink tangle. The colour was a match for Manic Panic’s Purple Rose, named for a 60-something customer in Canada who sent a fan letter to the brand saying “she wasn’t invisible anymore.”

What else is new…

Skincare

Jan. 14

Who: Skin Laundry

What: Cell Regenerator

Why: Is the salmon DNA craze going to turn into a Jurassic Park situation, where suddenly giant fish are showing up in our spas? Let’s hope not, for Skin Laundry’s sake. The facial hub is using PDNR with the fishy stuff, synthetic exosomes and plant stem cells in its new serum and mask, to be applied after a laser treatment for more glow, less redness and a smoother texture.

Jan. 15

Who: Saltair

What: KP Body Smoother Exfoliating Milk

Why: Unlike Rhode’s Glazing Milk, this creamy formula is loaded with glycolic and salicylic acids along with urea and allantoin to gently brighten and soften the limbs and torso. It’s $22.

Jan. 16

Who: Native

What: Whole-Body Shave Cream

Why: Available in three scents, this $20 foam is Native’s entry into the men’s shaving space. The tagline is “for your chest and the rest” which would have raised an “ick” flag in many boardrooms, but I guess not this one.

Jan. 20

Who: Billie

What: Ice Sparkle Razor Starter Kit

Why: An “icicle” product without a Heated Rivalry reference? Amazing. Billie’s shimmery razor is here just in time for the winter Olympics… which the Heated Rivalry guys will absolutely be attending, right?

***

Who: Rael

What: Blemish Recovery Mask

Why: It’s hard to be mad at a $4.50 mask that’s targeted for acne-prone skin. The “gauze-to-gel” formulation makes it less slide-y than other face masks, though this one is purely utilitarian — no kooky colours, just a clear matte sheet filled with actives.

***

Who: Saje Natural Wellness

What: The Vibrance Collection

Why: A cachet of four “face and aura mists” and four body oil mists, this drop blends essential oils like lavender, spearmint and rose with distilled water, coconut fatty oils, palm kernel oil and sugarcane.

***

Who: Noble Panacea

What: The Exceptional Repair Reset Cream

Why: The luxury skincare line — famously co-founded by a Nobel Laureate — launched its latest: a calming moisturiser that targets cortisol inflaming the skin. All you have to do is use it daily for a month.

Jan. 21

Who: POV Beauty

What: Snatch It

Why: More from the salmon sperm front: A $42 serum ampoule and $38 eye serum intended as a youth boost for skin, and brought to us by Mikayla Noguiera.

POV Beauty snatch it
POV Beauty’s latest skincare offering is all about prep. (POV Beauty)

Jan. 22

Who: Ogee

What: Complete Cream

Why: Call it moisture multitasking. This face and body lotion has a rich texture with a cushion-y feel.

***

Who: Lancer

What: Gravity Dark Spot Correcting Serum

Why: Formulated for more sensitive skin, this brightening formula also claims to have a “lifting active” that helps restore firmness to the complexion.

Jan. 23

Who: The Ordinary

What: Rice Lipids + Ectoin Microemulsion

Why: This lightweight formula claims to deliver the same benefits as a rich cream. Let’s see how the New Yorkers braving zero-degree windchill this week feel after a few drops!

***

Who: Knesko

What: Pearl Renew Collection

Why: A face mask and eye patches infused with mandelic acid, lactobionic acid and “hydrolised pearl extract” which is what happens when pearls get zapped with gentle acid to release their amino acids, peptides, and trace minerals including zinc and calcium.

***

Who: Abib

What: PDRN Intensive Crème and PDRN Glow Resum

Why: Korea’s most popular skincare brand rolled out its two strongest PDRN formulas, including a hardcore rich cream and a watery serum, on Amazon.com.

***

Who: Luna Bronze

What: Self Tanning Milk

Why: The Aussie brand debuts a moisturising formula that seems like an elevated Jergens Natural Glow situation. It’s got hyaluronic acid and niacinamide and retails at Amazon for $35.

Jan. 19

Who: L’Oréal Paris

What: Blufiller Blurring Lip Contour

Why: A $13 formula in eight shades that promises a semi-matte finish, glide-on application and the appearance of fuller, plusher lips.

Jan. 21

Who: R.e.m. Beauty

What: Sweet Dreams Eyeshadow Quads

Why: These talc-free, super-blendable shadows come in shimmers and matte satins, and got their debut on R.e.m. founder Ariana Grande at the Golden Globes. (They’re probably too glittery to wear as Dot in Sunday in the Park with George, but maybe Jonathan Bailey can sport them as he finishes the hat.)

***

Who: Milk Makeup

What: Hydro Grip Gel ConcealerWhy: Building on the brand’s best-selling primer, this creamy stick gives blendable, buildable coverage in 15 shades.

***

Who: Natasha Denona

What: Hy-Blush Cloudy Cream Cheek Duo

Why: A double compact with two creamy pigments, this $42 offering can also be used as an eye colour wash — a relief if, like me, you live in fear that Glossier discontinues its Lid Star franchise.

***

Who: Aprés Nail

What: Liquid Death Press-Ons

Why: Do you love canned water? How about coffin-tipped nails, which are basically a rectangle French manicure situation? How about heavy metal-themed nail decal sheets? Then yay, this $100 box is for you. It’s packaged like an “evidence kit” that plays into the True Crime But Make It Pretty trend.

Jan. 22

Who: Colourpop

What: The Twilight Eclipse Collection

Why: It’s cornball. It’s problematic. It’s great. The Twilight Saga: Eclipse movie debuted 16 years ago, but this week, you can get new eyeshadow and lip gloss inspired by the emotionally tortured undead teens.

Jan. 15

Who: Wet Brush

What: Frizz-Free Detangler

Notes: Is climate change shifting the design of hair tools? Wet Brush says this $15 detangler uses “patent-pending ionic infusion technology” to smooth out frizzy hair in “unpredictable climates,” which is… every climate, right now. You can buy it on TikTok Shop along with Amazon.

***

Who: Being Haircare

What: Ulta Beauty entry

Why: Technically, Jaimee Lupton’s haircare brand has already rolled into Ulta; Her first one, Monday Haircare, launched into the retailer in 2021. This week, its curl-focused sister label Being Haircare joined the stock party.

Jan. 22

Who: OGX

What: A shampoo and conditioner commercial with Josh Peck

Why: A new campaign starring the actor and funnyman Peck — endeared to Millennials as half of the duo “Drake & Josh” — features Peck “mansplaining” OGX’s bond protein repair shampoo and conditioner to his wife Paige O’Brien Peck; it’s also the latest attempt by a beauty company (OGX is owned by Kenvue) to use comedy to drive brand awareness.

Valentino fragrance
The latest fragrance from Valentino beauty features plum, vanilla and — of course — a rockstud glass bottle. (Valentino Beauty)

Jan. 19

Who: Valentino Beauty

What: Born in Roma Purple Melancholia

Why: The maestro is gone but the rockstud glass spritz goes on. This time, it’s a plum and vanilla blend in a deep violet bottle, with a campaign starring Adut Akech and Anwar Hadid.

Jan. 20

Who: Literie

What: Fifa World Cup Collection

Why: The World Cup doesn’t have an official fragrance (except spilled Stella Artois, maybe?) but now it does have three sanctioned candles. Canada smells like amber and maple; Mexico smells like dahlia and pepper; USA smells like eroding human rights… wait, no, sorry, it smells like grass and bergamot. They’re $50 each.

***

Who: Henry Rose

What: London 1983

Why: Michelle Pfeiffer’s “clean” fragrance brand debuts a fig scent inspired by a perfume the actress bought from a King’s Road street fair in her youth. (Cool, right?) Pfeiffer did a minor promotional tour for the new launch and told Jenna Rosenstein at Bazaar that she hated her Scarface bob!

Jan. 21

Who: Kylie Cosmetics

What: Cosmic Intense

Why: By now, you have likely seen the mesmerising imagery of Kylie in a Britney-esque red latex bodysuit, standing alongside her red-lacquered perfume bottles, which look like a MoMA and vintage Fisher collaboration. Now you can smell the vanilla, blood orange and benzoin (balsamic resin) that Jenner wore to the Golden Globes last week.

Jan. 22

Who: Bvlgari

What: Le Gemme Tygar Extrait

Why: Grapefruit, ginger and ambergris make up the heart of this super-concentrated fragrance, which is packaged in a tawny tiger’s eye bottle instead of a giant crystal cat. (The right move.) The nose is Jacques Cavallier, LVMH’s in-house master perfumer, who also created Louis Vuitton’s entire fragrance line, Jean Paul Gaultier’s classic bustier scent, and my favourite fragrance ever, 2003’s Stella by Stella McCartney. (Bring it back!)

***

Who: YSL Beauty

What: Libre Berry Crush

Why: Raspberry, coconut and French lavender make up this flanker fragrance, which buttresses YSL’s best-selling Libre but looks like raspberry liqueur and hits shelves for just one month at Sephora and Macy’s.

Jan. 13

Who: Unwell

What: Target Capsule Collection

Notes: Spotted next to the Hanes undershirts: Alex Cooper’s sweatshirt, graphic tee, shorts, tote and baseball hat created to hype her Unwell Energy line of functional wellness drinks. An interesting tidbit: Unwell is represented by Full Picture, the same branding agency behind Kylie Cosmetics.

Jan. 16

Who: Cyklar

What: Perfume Oil Bag Charm

Why: For $15, you can get a branded silicone cap for your Cyklar Perfume Oil that clips directly onto the handbag, backpack or lanyard of your choice. Founder Claudia Sulewski — who is now famous enough that she gets mentioned in random Deuxmoi posts — wears hers on a Bottega Intrecciato tote. Cyklar also dropped a new hand cream.

Jan. 18

Brand: Olive & June

Launch: Ulta Beauty launch

Date: Jan. 18

Notes: We could have sworn that this ubiquitous, cheery nail brand was already at Ulta Beauty, but alas — the manicure juggernaut didn’t hit the orange shelves until this week, when it entered 600 doors as well as e-comm.

***

Who: Ôrebella

What: Mayfair Group leisurewear collection

Why: You thought Bella Hadid’s first fragrance partnership would be with Gigi’s sleeper hit knitwear line, Guest in Residence? Nope. She’s pairing with BFF Sam Abrahart’s Mayfair Group, which makes graphic-print sweats, on a collection of hoodies, pants, a long-sleeved tee, a hat that says “Aura Donor” (fun!) and scents packaged like wizard elixirs. Two days after the launch, nothing is sold out quite yet, which is good news for TikTok acolytes.

Ôrebella merchandise
The merch is available as a standalone, or as an add on with Ôrebella fragrance purchases. (Ôrebella)

I’m sorry, but even if Brooklyn Beckham is telling the truth, we must be Team Victoria, because the Satin Kajal Kohl Eyeliner pencils are frankly unmatched. Your move, Nicola — maybe there’s a lip stain you could make that would move the needle in your favour?

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