Sara Spruch-Feiner is a lifelong New Yorker and writer. She is a Senior Reporter at Glossy, where she spearheads Glossy Pop, a vertical about the intersection of beauty, fashion, and culture. She also writes the Glossy Pop Newsletter, which goes out on Fridays. She has contributed to publications including New York Magazine, The Zoe Report, Byrdie, Women’s Health, Coveteur, Shape—and many more. She is a graduate of Kenyon College where she earned her B.A. in English Literature (with a double minor in Women’s Studies and Art History) and a 2009 recipient of the New York Women in Communications, Inc. scholarship. She is equally passionate about women’s rights, really great serums, television, and the power of writing about them all.
Sara Spruch-Feiner is a lifelong New Yorker and writer. She is a Senior Reporter at Glossy, where she spearheads Glossy Pop, a vertical about the intersection of beauty, fashion, and culture. She also writes the Glossy Pop Newsletter, which goes out on Fridays. She has contributed to publications including New York Magazine, The Zoe Report, Byrdie, Women’s Health, Coveteur, Shape—and many more. She is a graduate of Kenyon College where she earned her B.A. in English Literature (with a double minor in Women’s Studies and Art History) and a 2009 recipient of the New York Women in Communications, Inc. scholarship. She is equally passionate about women’s rights, really great serums, television, and the power of writing about them all.
A new crop of skin-care brands is packaging and delivering skinimalism to the busy consumer who wants to cut through the noise of the extremely crowded industry.
Ashley Villa counts mega-influencers like Michelle Phan, Jenn Im, Chloe Morello and Nicol Concilio as clients at Rare Global, the talent management agency where she is CEO and partner. With a potential recession on the horizon, Villa discussed what impact the pandemic had on influencer marketing and how a recession...
There has never been as much attention paid to a brand’s values than in this day and age. According to research by WP Engine, reported in Newsweek, “72% of Gen-Z shoppers are more likely to buy from a company that contributes to a social cause. And they claim they're willing...
Summer means new SPF — one brand on June's list is devoted to sun care, while another debuted with just one product, an SPF — and any time of the year means new celebrity brands. This month, we've got Hailey Bieber's Rhode and Kim Kardashian's SKKN by Kim, two long-awaited...
Timed with his appointment as YSL Beauty's new ambassador, Glossy spoke with pop star and actor Troye Sivan about his own beauty journey.
With the decision official, many brands across the fashion, beauty and wellness industries broke their silence and issued statements — some bolder and less vague than others — issuing their support. Statements ranged from those making the brand's stance known to those also announcing donations.
Today's marketing landscape is somewhat unpredictable. Though brands have been told that Instagram is all but dead in the water and to pivot all their efforts to TikTok, body-care brand Soft Services recently found an exception through an influencer and her very successful Instagram Reels post.
It feels like almost every day beauty brands accuse one another of copying, whether it's a font, a color scheme, a logo, an ingredient list or a product name. Estée Laundry, the self-described beauty collective with 199,000 followers on Instagram, will often ask its followers their opinions on copycats in...
On Thursday, pop star Troye Sivan also joined the YSL Beauty family. Men are increasingly present in the beauty space: In February, Kayvon Thibodeaux inked a deal with Starface, and Harry Styles, Machine Gun Kelly and Lil Yachty all have their own brands. But men in the makeup space has...