It Was a Black Creative Family Reunion at Echelon Noir’s ‘Black Hair Reimagined’ Hair Show


Hair shows have a rich legacy of art and experimentation in the Black community. For 75 years, the innovative fantasy world of hair has been exulted at the Bronner Bros. International Beauty Show, where hairstylists come together to champion the diversity and creativity of Black hair, making their models transform through their sculptural and daring works. Last year, Bronner Bros.—the oldest Black-owned beauty brand in the U.S., decided to pause.

Echelon Noir Productions is continuing that legacy of craft and creativity in New York City with their very first hair show: Black Hair Reimagined: The New Era of Beauty. The brainchild of beauty experts (and best friends), hairstylist Jawara Wauchope and creative director and stylist Jarrod Lacks, it all came to life in the Financial District with a series of hair presentations from five hair originators, their equally ingenious stylist counterparts, and other beauty industry groundbreakers: including makeup directors Sir John and Sheika Daley, nail design director Dawn Sterling, casting director Liz Goldson, and creative movement director Stephen Galloway. Beauty and fashion icon Tracee Ellis Ross hosted the evening in Balmain, an all-black look bedecked in gold accessories and finished off with blood-red, slouchy boots. Solange Knowles, Luar’s Raul Lopez, Wayman and Micah, Rajni Jacques, and many others sat front row to take in all imaginative, colorful, gravity-defying looks on the catwalk—Anok Yai was just one in a parade of sculptural-haired models.

“I’m excited to be here because these are all my people,” Ellis Ross tells Vogue before the show got underway. “Even the stylists they’re working with are people that I know and adore. To kick off this weekend and all the work they’re going to be doing, this is a moment for their work to shine as an expression of them, not a collaboration of all the other pieces.”

As a brand founder herself with natural beauty and hair care brand PATTERN—and the daughter of a generation-defining superstar whose hair is a celebrity all on its own—Ellis Ross comes from a rich legacy of beauty as art and expression. “Hair will always mean the same thing for me—it’s a form of self-acceptance and a very intimate relationship that I feel honored to be able to have,” she says. “I love that my hair can do anything, if I treat it right, hydrate it, and love it. I love that in 2025, we’re at a place, where whether it’s the Crown Act or just what we get to see on the pages of magazines and on screen—it all feels like freedom and liberation.”





#Black #Creative #Family #Reunion #Echelon #Noirs #Black #Hair #Reimagined #Hair #Show

Related Posts

Pre-Met Gala, Doechii Pays a Jaunty Homage to André Leon Talley in Full Louis Vuitton

There’s a lot to play for, this coming Monday, in conceptualizing a look that celebrates the message. The ‘tailored for you’ theme reflects the exhibition’s focus on menswear, and is…

The Art of Making a Kentucky Derby Hat

While we’re days away from the Met Gala, a few thousand miles away, another opulent fashion spectacle is happening: The Kentucky Derby. The annual Churchill Downs horse race is now…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *