A
long, confusing beauty mystery.
This
week, The Washington Post published a story
about the experience of undocumented workers employed by the Trump
Organization, both before and during his run for the presidency. It’s full of
anecdotes of hypocrisy and raises important questions about immigration and
underpaid labor.
But buried many paragraphs into the narrative is a section detailing Trump’s unusually specific habits and requests, like requiring exactly 2.5 boxes of Tic Tacs in his bedroom at all times.
Then
came this sentence: “The same rule applied to the Bronx Colors-brand face makeup from
Switzerland that Trump slathered on — two full containers, one half full — even
if it meant the housekeepers had to regularly bring new shirts from the pro
shop because of the rust-colored stains on the collars.”
The story moves right along into the president’s penchant for Irish Spring soap, never pausing to consider the remarkable fact that we finally have concrete information about Trump’s face. This is information reporters have been trying to find for years.
It’s
a fact that Trump’s face appears as an unnatural shade of orange.
But
it’s not at all clear how it got that way. One theory is that he uses a tanning
bed, which Omarosa Manigault claimed in her book; the White
House denied it. This idea is supported by the
fact that the skin around his eyes looks lighter than the rest of his face,
possibly because of the protective goggles one wears in a tanning bed. One
official told The New York Times it was “good genes.”
Last
September, Trump complained about energy-efficient light bulbs (which
his administration has tried to block) making him look orange to House
Republicans at a policy retreat. ➨
Jason
Kelly, a makeup artist who touched up Trump’s makeup during the Republican
convention in 2016, thinks it is makeup on top of tanning. He told the paper,
“When I see him, I see a line of oxidized bronzer around his hairline. The
application is like a kindergartner did it.”
The
current Post story doesn’t specify the exact product Trump allegedly used, but
Bronx Colors, a Swiss brand, claimed it’s the Boosting Hydrating Concealer in orange. It
even offered shoppers a special deal, splashing the Post’s story on its landing
page: Buy anything on the site and get one of the orange tubes for free. It
retails for €6.50, or about $7.22. The site has crashed multiple times since
the story was published.
While
these are all heady revelations, there are still lots of questions. Is Bronx
Colors just trolling us? Is it really just as simple as Trump smearing orange
makeup all over his face? How did he even find this particular brand, which
isn’t currently sold in the US?
Since
there’s nothing I love more than political beauty investigative reporting —
like the mystery of Scott Pruitt’s fancy hotel lotion and
how exactly Stephen Miller’s spray-on hair works —
I attempted to find answers.
What is Bronx
Colors?
Vox.com image of company ad flagging the Washington Post story |
Isabelle
von Känel, the COO of Bronx Colors, cannot confirm that Donald Trump uses the
brand’s orange concealer. “We are not sending him a product knowing that we are
sending products to him, because there are different ways he can get it,” she
says.
Von
Känel confirmed that she spoke to David Fahrenthold, one of the reporters who
broke the story, who asked her the same question. He tweeted after the story broke that
when he asked the housekeepers what makeup shade it was, one replied “una
naranja espantosa,” which roughly translates to “a scary orange.” Von Känel
says, “They mentioned how [the housekeepers] described it and it can only be that
one,” she says, meaning the orange concealer.
The
brand is currently only sold directly in a handful of European countries and
the UK, but has wider distribution in about 40 countries. I couldn’t get my
hands on it myself, because it does not ship to the US. There are only a few
products from the brand available on Amazon.
However,
it was briefly sold here and got coverage on a few lifestyle sites, like Bustle and Allure. Ulta, the specialty beauty retailer,
carried it online for several months, from late 2016 until sometime in 2017.
Von
Känel confirms that Ulta stocked the brand online as part of a trial run. It
was also a sponsor for Lifetime’s American Beauty Star, a Project
Runway-like show for hair and makeup that first ran in September 2017. The
show, which was thrown together too quickly to sign on big makeup companies as
sponsors, worked with a lot of lesser known brands, according to a Beauty Independent story at the time.
Bronx
Colors never really caught on. Perhaps that was for the best. One YouTube review, with over 300,000 views,
was a brutal takedown. In the words of one commenter: “I feel like it looks
like poop.”
Von
Känel confirms the brand didn’t really market the product enough and that it
“wasn’t ready” for the US market. She says they have been in talks with
distributors and retailers, including Walmart, to bring the product here.
Indeed,
the Bronx-inspired promo copy echoes a slightly stilted and off-kilter view of
the US that Euro brands sometimes have, describing the “northernmost district
of New York City” where “the origins of hip-hop, breakdance and graffiti are
pervasive and emphasize the urban lifestyle.”
The
products are pretty standard if you’ve spent any time around makeup. It has all
the usual items, like eye shadow palettes, foundation, eye liners, and yes,
that orange concealer. The “o” in Bronx is rendered as the female symbol.
This
gives me pause, because knowing everything we know about Trump, would he use a
product so blatantly marketed for women? Bronx Colors has three
products specifically geared toward men, gendered via the male
symbol; this concealer is not one of them.
Orange
makeup isn’t meant to be worn alone
First,
a quick detour. Orange makeup is a specialty item, but it’s not rare. It’s
meant to be a color corrector. In fact, von Känel says the orange one is their
bestselling concealer. Orange is opposite blue on the color wheel, which means
it can theoretically neutralize blue tones in the skin, most commonly found
under the eyes.
Orange color correctors can also be helpful for evening out darker skin tones, according to Alexis Androulakis, a makeup artist and the founder of Fempower Beauty.
Orange color correctors can also be helpful for evening out darker skin tones, according to Alexis Androulakis, a makeup artist and the founder of Fempower Beauty.
“It’s
never an on-its-own product. It’s a neutralizer and certainly most effective on
the overall complexion for darker skin tones,” says Androulakis.
Whether
it’s used under the eyes to cover dark circles, or used on areas of
hyperpigmented skin on those with olive skin or darker, it is meant to be
buffed out so it’s not visible and so that a more natural skin-toned concealer
or foundation can be placed on top.
Von
Känel wouldn’t comment on any political implications or whether this attention
could be negative, but she did say, “If he really uses it … then I would say,
‘Okay, Mr. President, I think you are using it a little bit wrong.”
The
point is, you shouldn’t see any orange at all, because it’s not a skin
undertone that humans have, according to Androulakis. “Orange just has all
these negative connotations. It’s not very flattering. It’s really the thing we
try to avoid in any type of shade matching exercise, period.”
When
asked if she had any further opinions on Trump’s application process, assuming
that orange concealer is the culprit, the makeup artist says, “He has a
nickname for a reason. I’m just surprised in all these years he hasn’t
consulted with an image consultant who can lead him down a different path.”
Donald
Trump reportedly has rosacea, a condition
that can cause a ruddiness in the skin. This is best color corrected with
green-tinted products; Bronx Colors has one in its lineup.
How
did Donald Trump learn about products like this?
There
is evidence from as early as 2012 that Trump was using orange-y makeup. One of
the same workers featured in this week’s Post story, Sandra Diaz, was
interviewed in a 2018 New York Times article: “That same
year, she said, Mr. Trump had an outburst over some orange stains on the collar
of his white golf shirt, which Ms. Diaz described as stubborn remnants of his
makeup, which she had difficulty removing.”
Since
the year in question was 2012, there’s no way that makeup could have been Bronx
Colors, since it wasn’t around yet. But that doesn’t mean he didn’t find the
brand at a later time.
Nicole
Bryl has been Melania Trump’s makeup artist since well before she became First
Lady. Bryl has done makeup for celebs like Kathie Lee Gifford and Maria
Menounos. She also kept a blog.
In
a 2016 post she wrote, “Life these days can be exhilarating
when words such as Trump. Makeup & Skincare are mentioned, especially
during this 2016 campaign period...I have been asked this so many times through
the years and I can honestly report that I know nothing about Mr. T’s hair and
DO NOT and NEVER HAVE DONE HIS MAKEUP!” (Sic)
As
a professional makeup artist, it’s not surprising she’d want to distance
herself from his much-ridiculed aesthetic, but she has talked to him about
products, as she chronicled in a 2013 post: “At dinner Mr. Trump was
engaging in conversation. He asked me what my favorite makeup products were and
why? Which brands did I think were cutting edge? He then ...thanked me for my
work which I thought was extremely generous of him to express out loud.”
Again, this is pre-Bronx Colors, and Bryl had a predilection for super high-end brands. She herself sells a $450 skin care product.
Again, this is pre-Bronx Colors, and Bryl had a predilection for super high-end brands. She herself sells a $450 skin care product.
She
has also recommended color correcting. In a 2014 post about getting a
“polished” makeup look, she wrote, “With a foundation brush, conservatively
apply MAC’s ‘Prep + Prime CC color
correcting’ all over face and neck which evens out skin tone,
while also brightening the skin.”
A
link to the product is broken, because it’s a range that MAC has discontinued.
But it included orange correcting products, both lighter and darker ones. In
2014, a makeup blogger interviewed a MAC artist about the
products, including the apricot-hued powders and cream, meant to be put all
over the face. He said they were sheer and that the darker orange was meant to
be used on deeper skin tones as a preparation step.
Again,
there is no direct evidence that Bryl told Trump to put orange color corrector
all over his face. And the sticking point for me in all this is: why Bronx
Colors? It’s not exactly a household name.
I searched another avenue. Trump also had makeup applied for TV — with a much heavier hand — when he hosted The Apprentice. So I tried to track down some makeup artists from that era.
According to the show’s IMDb page, Kathy Santiago was there from 2009 through 2017. A quick search confirms her specialty is men’s grooming. She would have had contact with him at a time when Bronx Colors was available in the US. Alas, she did not respond to requests for an interview.
We know a little more about Trump’s grooming habits, but not enough, in my opinion. I’m hoping Fahrenthold has more details to reveal. I reached out to him, too, just in case some important makeup tidbit got cut from the story. I’ll update if so. Feel free to email me at cheryl.wischhover@gmail.com if you have any tips or intel.
Orange
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