If you’re looking to master some new hairstyles in quarantine, Laetitia Ky and Ipsy creators Bianca Alexa, Adonia Bree and Jasmine Defined have your back. In celebration of Black History Month, the experts walk us through four styles for textured hair — a curly half updo, fabric-wrapped braids, bantu knots and crochet braids — in our new video tutorial.
A casual, everyday style, Alexa’s half-up-half-down ‘do uses Briogeo Farewell Frizz spray to define curls. After slicking back a portion of your hair, add twisted strands at each temple to help hold the updo in place and add detail. Ky achieves a more dramatic look with her “Kybraids.” Simply wrap strips of colorful African waxed fabric around each braid and secure at the end with thread.
Take a look at HYPEBAE‘s natural hair tutorial below and on Instagram.
“The birth of my eldest daughter gave me an understanding that there is a difference between my actual ability verses what I tell myself,” Jean-Baptiste reflects. “I had always been petrified of childbirth, but after having a natural, unmedicated birth, I learned that my fears can be dismantled and overcome. I used this rule to help give me the confidence to start the brand that I had been too scared to start before,” she explains. Things fell into place when, on her formative trip to Haiti, the designer discovered a woman-owned and operated workshop that she would eventually enlist to produce Petit Kouraj’s handmade bags.
Three years after that trip to Haiti, Jean-Baptiste’s Petit Kouraj — which is Haitian Creole for “little courage” — has paid off. Merging whimsy and sophistication, the brand’s signature fringed handbag twists and twirls with the wearer, adding energy and movement to any outfit. Each fine, hand-applied strand whips to and fro like horsehair, expressing a vitality that most bags — static, structured containers or slumped pouches — lack. The hero design is one Jean-Baptiste came up with entirely on her own. “There was a disconnect between what I envisioned in my mind and how the samples would come out,” she recounts. “I decided to make a sample of the fringe net bag myself and literally spent hours constructing it by hand. It was such a validating feeling when I had finished…It was at that moment I knew I was holding something special,” she says.
After producing the sample, Jean-Baptiste worked with Haitian artisans to devise a plan to replicate the bag at scale. “The fringe is applied and sewn individually, and the handles are wrapped with leather cord. It is a very labor-intensive process and although producing in Haiti comes with many unusual challenges, I think it’s worth the extra effort to produce in a way that is slow and meaningful,” she notes. As for her propensity for fringe, the designer explains its appeal: “It’s mysterious, fun, sexy and most of all, it has life. It has a personality of its own.”
Petit Kouraj is, at its core, all about translating the dynamism of clothing into accessories. “I want to create bags that give the feeling of clothing,” Jean-Baptiste remarks. “I often take inspiration from womenswear or jewelry and re-imagine it as an accessory. Petit Kouraj is all about the interplay between texture, movement and, being from the Caribbean, I love color.” In addition to its fringed offerings, the brand also crafts hand-knit totes decorated with seashell charms and bric-a-brac pendants, reminiscent of tiny treasures caught in a fishing net. It’s a product lineup that encapsulates the joy and wonder of discovery without becoming twee or overly precious.
When asked to offer a piece of advice to aspiring designers, Jean-Baptiste urges self-reflection. “Find the thing within you that is uniquely you, and the ideas that refuse to rest. Then double down on them,” she encourages. She also advocates for kindness, an asset that often falls by the wayside amidst the frenetic pace of the fashion industry. “Remember your worth and be kind to everyone. You never know who or what will be the person and experience that propels you.”
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