Let’s talk about about white women can get a gallon of shampoo, a gallon of conditioner and a half a gallon of styler for a few bucks but products for kinky curly or coils mostly for women of color get 8 ounces or less of each for quadruple the price and we use more of each so end up paying more for less. Can any of these companies, large or small ethnically owned or not, female owned or not, to offer us more products for comparable costs??? Women with more textured hair should have to spend more.
Agree! Although I do understand that the ingredients we use for curly hair are more natural, higher quality and therefore more expensive than the cheap sulphate silicon stuff they put in straight hair products.
@@mandalaqueen828 only problem is we are always told it’s because we are getting something sooo much different. This happens often with many things disproportionately more expensive or different quality in regards to people of color. There is no reason for the drastic mark up nor amount of product sold. It’s a marketing ploy to tell us we should someone feel better for paying more for less. Most of these ingredients are very similar and only offer small % of differences. Keep in mind we aren’t getting homemade things from the garden. Uncharging poc or poorer people is done with many goods and services. It’s unfair and crummy that poc with kinky coily or textured type hair must pay more for less.
though surprisingly compared to every other product I"ve used, I always use less Lush volumne wise. But yea if you ask them like about the deep conditioners and stuff they'll tell you it's 'meant' for 1 use or 3 for the large ones. But we all get like 10 uses out of it cause eff that.
The problem is that the products are so small. You’d have to use half of it to get the results you want, therefore having to buy more after two or three uses depending on your hair length.
Depends on how concentrated they are. I have some smaller sized products that last longer than others that come in larger sizes but are less concentrated. We often use a lot more product than is needed.
@@phieso160 SO expensive and usually i buy all my products from the same brand and range excluding my growth oils so its like £30 but i only wash my hair every two weeks so i suppose they last a while
Glad they're doing this, but I don't think it's up to our community to support every effort to market to us. It's up to companies to decide whether they want our coins or not, and create products that actually work for us. We've been out here with money to spend. I want real choice and quality.
UK Black owned brands: Almocado, Anita grant, Heavens Touch UK (etsy). Just some brands for us by us. Feel free to reply with other black owned brands you like. Racist Lush aren't getting my money.
@@tyraezekiel9293 I'll state that their wrong, but if you want to use it OK, but I haven't seen that description. This is a Black British hair company in partnership with Lush, they don't use just one word to describe the describe the texture of Afro hair.
@@farrahc7055 Nooo, I'm trying to commend them for not using the term " for coarse hair textures" , like so many other brands. I like that they actually said afro. I guess I was confusing 😅.
The structure of this video isn’t very good. It jumps between too many people too often which means it’s difficult to keep track of what product each of them are using. It also just drags out.
I know Pantene isn’t black owned but the gold series line was created by 11 black phd scientists (all women) and the products are practical and affordable and I absolutely love their stuff like $7CAD highly recommend
I really thought it would be another brand trying to capitalize on black dollars (suddenly) but my friend just bought me a few products and I am pleasantly surprised! It took QUITE awhile for them get diverse and include black people in their haircare lines (I mean, I spend alot of money with them and always rolled my eyes when I walked past hair section like... Take my money but don't care about me). I am glad that black culture is FINALLY a focus although I do give my dollars to companies who were doing it before BLM was trendy.
Thanks Lush it's the thought that counts we embrace any lovely natural sweet scented hair products that are not chemical riddled. Should be suitable for all hair types if it natural product nobody should be all up in their feelings about natural hair products for Afro type hair
@@adaenechi6723 Maybe a Black British Beauty Brands review video? Jamii is a good place to buy those kinds of products, and detangled-hair.com, which is a Black-owned store. Miss Jessie's is a mainstay natural hair product and has been reviewed to death over the years.
Love this!! Would have loved to have tried if I didn't have locs... speaking of which can you do a loc'd based video or add another lady with locs... get the whole range of hair types in there?
lush’s founders were trichologists...so duh they make products for wide range of ppl’s hair if you pick for YOUR HAIR TYPE(not for the scents) they should work good and most of them are vegan (the rest are vegetarian) which is great
🌸🌸🌸This is so great. I Love Lush. Absolutely Love them. I use R&B, H’suan Wen Hau hair treatment, Curly Wurly Shampoo and of recently Curl Power hair cream. All great products and the latter, really moisturizing and smell incredible. 🌸🌸 Hair always has major shrinkage even though it’s got some length. Super dry. Just always leaned towards natural products and making my own concoctions. I have 4C hair, fine but dense, High Porosity.🌸🌸
Loved the reviews, BUT ... the range of product for Afro hair is too small, very Slow in coming ( considering we spend so much on our hair care) and the prices are far too high. I will stick to buying my hair products from my sisters on the market. 2021 Black Pound Focus.
Reminder that Lush UK's CEO has admitted to donating thousands of dollars to an Anti-trans group in the UK and also recently made care packages for cops which isn't immediately a bad thing but people think it's in bad taste considering the on going BLM movement. Lush NA is under a different CEO, and has condemned them for donating this money. Just something to keep in mind when considering what kind of companies you want to give your money to.
Not sure what neighborhood you live in but imagine if there were no cops. Change is certain needed but lets not pretend criminals would just go away if there were no police. Support good police, prosecute the criminal ones. And if Black lives mattered to Black folk as much as we want them to matter to White people we would be much better off.
@@bellasviews666 choosing to support only cis women over all women is anti-trans. Because trans women are women and should be included. If a charity (regardless of the type of charity work) wouldn't help black people, it'd be racist. So a women's charity that refuses to help trans women is anti-trans. Just because the charity's claimed goal is not "to hurt trans women" does not mean it doesn't hurt trans women by not including them.
For me, I'd rather spend the price point on Black-owned products. Afro- descended people are some of the only people with our hair type. I think we should benefit from the market that caters to it. It does mean I don't have a billion hair products, and I don't follow marketing claims made by brands. Much of the marketing pull on natural afro hair products is around moisture and strength, but also straightness (often disguised as manageable, softening etc). There's definitely a savvy-ness required.
It’s a black woman who created the new products. Her name is Saran can’t remember her surname. Look o. Their website, information is there. She used her sisters formula for the scalp oil hence why it’s called Renee Soufflé. The products are very good just extremely expensive for the quantity.
@@curljewels i know that's why I tried to explain the build up can cause breakage. Especially with box braids and faux locs. So much dirt gets caught in them.
Have they moved on from the days of rnb? That was horrible, greasy and overpowering scent. Want to support black owned? Then try: Qhemet Biologics, Mielle Organics, Oyin Handmade, Alikay Naturals, Ecoslay, Uncle Funky's Daughter, The Doux, Soultanicals and many more. UK has Antidote Street to buy your goods and Afrocenchix, but we need more good UK made hair black owned brands. We're way behind America.
@@carolina5429 The internet is a big place, hell, I’m part of the LGBTQ+ community and this was the first I’d heard of it. You can’t blame people for being late to the party on information that isn’t mass known. I doubt Buzzfeed would’ve done the video if everyone knew this.
Could someone tell me what type of hair Is this one?. I think I have the same hair as she. Thx The one at 3:52 (Spanish Is my first language, sorry for the mistakes)
I won’t use this trash on myself or my children .Lush is one of the specific brands I discuss with my kids. I say look how we did not matter to them until “Black Lives Matter” and it still took an extra year. That mess clearly defines in bold print that we DID NOT MATTER UNTIL WE WERE A HASHTAG AND TRENDING!!! It takes one year approx. for product development and testing !!!! I will not be a billboard for racism! Yes LUSH is eco friendly and all that but there are SO many shades of brown and black and WE are way more than an afterthought!!!! Lush 😂
Let’s talk about about white women can get a gallon of shampoo, a gallon of conditioner and a half a gallon of styler for a few bucks but products for kinky curly or coils mostly for women of color get 8 ounces or less of each for quadruple the price and we use more of each so end up paying more for less. Can any of these companies, large or small ethnically owned or not, female owned or not, to offer us more products for comparable costs??? Women with more textured hair should have to spend more.
Preach!! I just shelled out $100 for 4 products..in in Australia so they cost even more then they do in the US
Agree! Although I do understand that the ingredients we use for curly hair are more natural, higher quality and therefore more expensive than the cheap sulphate silicon stuff they put in straight hair products.
@@mandalaqueen828 only problem is we are always told it’s because we are getting something sooo much different. This happens often with many things disproportionately more expensive or different quality in regards to people of color. There is no reason for the drastic mark up nor amount of product sold. It’s a marketing ploy to tell us we should someone feel better for paying more for less. Most of these ingredients are very similar and only offer small % of differences. Keep in mind we aren’t getting homemade things from the garden. Uncharging poc or poorer people is done with many goods and services. It’s unfair and crummy that poc with kinky coily or textured type hair must pay more for less.
No, higher quality products always cost more than low quality ones, even if they are for straight hair
They won't be getting this bw money thats for sure. Everybody wants the bw coin nah ill pass.
The portion sizes are SO small. 3 washes and you’re done. I think Lush should know that Afro hair takes so much more product.
though surprisingly compared to every other product I"ve used, I always use less Lush volumne wise. But yea if you ask them like about the deep conditioners and stuff they'll tell you it's 'meant' for 1 use or 3 for the large ones. But we all get like 10 uses out of it cause eff that.
Facts
They do that’s why it’s a billion dollar industry we make them rich...support black owned businesses at least put the money back in our pockets.
They probably were given the smaller sizes as a test to try out. If you visit the website they come in more sizes, not cheap as you must know.
TALK DI TINGS!!!!
Can we please appreciate how beautiful they all are :’)
The problem is that the products are so small. You’d have to use half of it to get the results you want, therefore having to buy more after two or three uses depending on your hair length.
They come in bigger sizes
Depends on how concentrated they are. I have some smaller sized products that last longer than others that come in larger sizes but are less concentrated. We often use a lot more product than is needed.
Damn haircare must be expensive for y’all
@@adaenechi6723 those were the largest sizes
@@phieso160 SO expensive and usually i buy all my products from the same brand and range excluding my growth oils so its like £30 but i only wash my hair every two weeks so i suppose they last a while
Anyways, buy black owned guys
Lmao literally. I saw the title and I’m like, “I thought we weren’t giving Lush our coin...?” Certainly not LUSH. 😭
@@SamMKKK what did lush do
@@christabellatoao right, I’m curious.
I have many black owned brand products but if Lush can provide products to fill a need I have I will certainly purchase from them.
A black lady did design and create these products tho.😬🤷🏿♀️
Glad they're doing this, but I don't think it's up to our community to support every effort to market to us. It's up to companies to decide whether they want our coins or not, and create products that actually work for us. We've been out here with money to spend. I want real choice and quality.
UK Black owned brands: Almocado, Anita grant, Heavens Touch UK (etsy). Just some brands for us by us. Feel free to reply with other black owned brands you like. Racist Lush aren't getting my money.
Afrocenchix, Afro hair candy work for me😄 both UKblackowned
@@EW777Xx Thanks for sharing this.
MELANIN HAIR CARE is the 🐐
How are they racist? Genuinely interested to know because I didn’t know they were, and for future interest in where to shop🤔
They're also terfs
Watching some of these girls rub their hair with towels just gave me anxiety. 😟
I was literally looking for this comment omg
Same! My whole body cringed
I liked lush until reading these comments , let’s shop black owned guys.
I’m alright thx,I’m gonna stick with the products that work for me
At last a company that uses the word Afro to describe our hair. 21.12.2020
* for coarse hair*
@@tyraezekiel9293 Afro textured hair. You do know not all black people have coarse hair, don't you? 26.12.2020
@@farrahc7055 I'm saying that's what all the other brands say when describing products for our hair.
@@tyraezekiel9293 I'll state that their wrong, but if you want to use it OK, but I haven't seen that description. This is a Black British hair company in partnership with Lush, they don't use just one word to describe the describe the texture of Afro hair.
@@farrahc7055 Nooo, I'm trying to commend them for not using the term " for coarse hair textures" , like so many other brands. I like that they actually said afro. I guess I was confusing 😅.
The structure of this video isn’t very good. It jumps between too many people too often which means it’s difficult to keep track of what product each of them are using. It also just drags out.
The way shes rubbing her head with that towel
Could never be me 😬
I know Pantene isn’t black owned but the gold series line was created by 11 black phd scientists (all women) and the products are practical and affordable and I absolutely love their stuff like $7CAD highly recommend
Im so proud to be black
Oh Lush getting in on the natural hair community because they know there is money to be made.
“Eco. *Chef’s Kiss*” 0:47
I rather give my money to Black Businesses instead.
Same I love JairCare!
@motherlandorganicsco are AMAZING! All my friends and family get their natural hair and skin products from them. Black owned and UK based!
I really thought it would be another brand trying to capitalize on black dollars (suddenly) but my friend just bought me a few products and I am pleasantly surprised! It took QUITE awhile for them get diverse and include black people in their haircare lines (I mean, I spend alot of money with them and always rolled my eyes when I walked past hair section like... Take my money but don't care about me). I am glad that black culture is FINALLY a focus although I do give my dollars to companies who were doing it before BLM was trendy.
Lady with braids, love your freckles 😍
No for me....there are definitely enough BOBs with amazing products for Afro hair.
Pip is a cute name. 🙂
I CRINGED everytime a microfiber towel wasn't used! Buuuut can we talk about how beautiful these ladies are!! 😍I definitely trying Reneé's Souffle!
Exactly!! They're all stunning
I just love Lush, the products have helped me transform my wavy frizzy curls
pip seems like such a nice gal
What it Took Saturn and Jupiter to come together to get a real product for my hair LOL
😂😂😂😂😂
Thanks Lush it's the thought that counts we embrace any lovely natural sweet scented hair products that are not chemical riddled. Should be suitable for all hair types if it natural product nobody should be all up in their feelings about natural hair products for Afro type hair
Do a miss Jessie’s review! Black owned and amazing products!!
On it
@@adaenechi6723 Maybe a Black British Beauty Brands review video? Jamii is a good place to buy those kinds of products, and detangled-hair.com, which is a Black-owned store. Miss Jessie's is a mainstay natural hair product and has been reviewed to death over the years.
The mane choice is an amazing black owned hair care brand. All their products are pretty good for type 4 hair and not disappointing
It’s not black owned any more. She sold her company to a larger corporation. Not all products marketed to black people are black owned :(
Love this!! Would have loved to have tried if I didn't have locs... speaking of which can you do a loc'd based video or add another lady with locs... get the whole range of hair types in there?
Noted, will do something with locs for sure
Please and Thank You
Those freckles are badass
lush’s founders were trichologists...so duh they make products for wide range of ppl’s hair if you pick for YOUR HAIR TYPE(not for the scents) they should work good
and most of them are vegan (the rest are vegetarian) which is great
yay we have a new girl!! (ikran)
🌸🌸🌸This is so great. I Love Lush. Absolutely Love them. I use R&B, H’suan Wen Hau hair treatment, Curly Wurly Shampoo and of recently Curl Power hair cream. All great products and the latter, really moisturizing and smell incredible.
🌸🌸
Hair always has major shrinkage even though it’s got some length. Super dry.
Just always leaned towards natural products and making my own concoctions.
I have 4C hair, fine but dense, High Porosity.🌸🌸
What are the usual prices for shampoo because £18 is a little ridiculous, £25 for a co-wash?.
I need to know if these women have low or high porosity
Omg this deserves so much more likes than it currently has
Loved the reviews, BUT ... the range of product for Afro hair is too small, very Slow in coming ( considering we spend so much on our hair care) and the prices are far too high.
I will stick to buying my hair products from my sisters on the market.
2021 Black Pound Focus.
would love to see you do the sulfur 8/wild hair growth 30 day challenge!
I hated their cowash, I felt it wasn't moisturizing enough. Like I had to use a lot. Also idk how I feel about a spray leave-in. I need a lotion.
Wooo can't wait to try! Thanks beauties 🖤
Somalis represent 🇸🇴
my girl Ikran is a beaut❤
I'm trying it as soon as stores open, as I need to smell the products first.
THE WOMAN WITH THE FRECKLES IS THE PRETTIEST THING EVEEERR 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Idk why but I got really good tingles from that one girl.
? What girl?
Very distracted by how beautiful these folks are! They all radiate great vibes!
oooh goody good girl for letting us know😘
I'm a big fan of Lush products. I never tried their hair products but I love their skin scrubs, cleansers, and moisturizers
Christ, seeing a Tangle Teezer makes me feel like I’m 12 again. 😂
Don’t use Jesus Christ name in vain ❤️
@@kg2002 that’s not even what that means ❤️
Reminder that Lush UK's CEO has admitted to donating thousands of dollars to an Anti-trans group in the UK and also recently made care packages for cops which isn't immediately a bad thing but people think it's in bad taste considering the on going BLM movement. Lush NA is under a different CEO, and has condemned them for donating this money. Just something to keep in mind when considering what kind of companies you want to give your money to.
Not sure what neighborhood you live in but imagine if there were no cops. Change is certain needed but lets not pretend criminals would just go away if there were no police. Support good police, prosecute the criminal ones.
And if Black lives mattered to Black folk as much as we want them to matter to White people we would be much better off.
Its wasnt an anti trans group. It was a charity for women. The charity just choose to support Cis women or women who were born women.
@@bellasviews666 that's the same as being anti-trans ❤️
@@mollybrown5534 Nah it isnt. Anti is being against trans. Choosing to support women isnt anti trans it's just choosing to support women.
@@bellasviews666 choosing to support only cis women over all women is anti-trans. Because trans women are women and should be included. If a charity (regardless of the type of charity work) wouldn't help black people, it'd be racist. So a women's charity that refuses to help trans women is anti-trans. Just because the charity's claimed goal is not "to hurt trans women" does not mean it doesn't hurt trans women by not including them.
For me, I'd rather spend the price point on Black-owned products. Afro- descended people are some of the only people with our hair type. I think we should benefit from the market that caters to it. It does mean I don't have a billion hair products, and I don't follow marketing claims made by brands. Much of the marketing pull on natural afro hair products is around moisture and strength, but also straightness (often disguised as manageable, softening etc). There's definitely a savvy-ness required.
Y’all should get men to try it too because I think the curl power hair cream is great
Ikran has such a cute voice
They have a afro hair range well I never it be interesting to see what the formula makers look like
It’s a black woman who created the new products. Her name is Saran can’t remember her surname. Look o. Their website, information is there. She used her sisters formula for the scalp oil hence why it’s called Renee Soufflé.
The products are very good just extremely expensive for the quantity.
Wait... she has braids in? That’s cool, I also wash my hair with braids. But... how will she know what the products are like?
Exactly 🤷🏾♀️🥴 I don’t get the point .
5:00 is not putting that conditioner on right omg no wonder
Yes for 4c
These are overpriced for the size. Yeaaaa I’ll stick to lush for skin and that’s only when I feel like splurging
Why are there barely any comments compared to the views? 🤔
From part of the uk are their accents?
London
Sorry but I can't understand why she's using the product on her braids. We can't see anything happening
Even with weave in, it's good to cleanse the scalp or the dirt will build up. The build up can cause breakage.
some people don't know you can wash your hair while in braids so this can be helpful to those.
@@curljewels i know that's why I tried to explain the build up can cause breakage. Especially with box braids and faux locs. So much dirt gets caught in them.
It gonna save my hair from what I did to it in the past 😂😂😂
Stop using towels to dry your hair!
What should we use instead?
@@BebechocoOooleta A cotton t-shirt or a microfiber towel.
@@Floridameerkat93 Microfiber towels are the best for hair, I don't use anything else. 22.12.2020
Towels really aren’t deep. Just don’t dry rough.
Bread Beauty Supply makes great products and they are black owned. I don't know about supporting LUSH after the whole WPUK situation.
I would like to try out their hair products at some point I might go get some.
💛💛💛
Definitely agree with Ikran about the price. It seems overpriced tbh with the amount of product
Have they moved on from the days of rnb? That was horrible, greasy and overpowering scent. Want to support black owned? Then try: Qhemet Biologics, Mielle Organics, Oyin Handmade, Alikay Naturals, Ecoslay, Uncle Funky's Daughter, The Doux, Soultanicals and many more. UK has Antidote Street to buy your goods and Afrocenchix, but we need more good UK made hair black owned brands. We're way behind America.
Add Curl Mix, Melanin and Camille Rose to your list.
Lush actually started with hair products not bath bombs as the owner is a tricologist
I’ll never use lush on my hair
I don't know if i can support lush atm they donated loads of money recently to an anti trans charity
true but they’re probably one of the most ethical brands and they said that they didn’t realise that charity supported the anti trans movement
@@sneakerhead6625 hmm ok
@@sneakerhead6625 "didn't realize" sure, Jan
@@carolina5429 The internet is a big place, hell, I’m part of the LGBTQ+ community and this was the first I’d heard of it.
You can’t blame people for being late to the party on information that isn’t mass known. I doubt Buzzfeed would’ve done the video if everyone knew this.
@@duckydae I'm mocking Lush not the consumer. Im saying that I doubt Lush didn't realize they donated to such organization
Could someone tell me what type of hair Is this one?. I think I have the same hair as she. Thx
The one at 3:52
(Spanish Is my first language, sorry for the mistakes)
Maybe about 3b/3c/4a. I hope that answers your question!
Looks 3c or maybe 4a. 🤔
I cringed so much when she was towel drying her hair and it was in circles lol.
People really need to stop using soo much cowash. Shampooing is imperative
Washing hair with braids is a no no 🥲
As a American watching this, you all have very quiet speaking voices...Or are Americans just loud😂🥴?
Oh my god, towel to hair???? 😬😬😬 I cringed so hard!
and her hair was super heat damaged as well..
Yo
Stan obia naturals
Uhggg! No thanks!
These sizes are just not it
Meh
I won’t use this trash on myself or my children .Lush is one of the specific brands I discuss with my kids. I say look how we did not matter to them until “Black Lives Matter” and it still took an extra year. That mess clearly defines in bold print that we DID NOT MATTER UNTIL WE WERE A HASHTAG AND TRENDING!!! It takes one year approx. for product development and testing !!!! I will not be a billboard for racism! Yes LUSH is eco friendly and all that but there are SO many shades of brown and black and WE are way more than an afterthought!!!! Lush 😂
I can't physically be in or near the shop. It stinks and makes me feel dizzy. Good luck to any who buy