Frankie201809-10

(Frankie) #1
For a little tube of black goo, mascara sure does a lot of heavy lifting.
Only a few coats of the stuff can give you a Bambi-like gaze; disguise
the fact you were up scrolling through social media until the wee hours
of the morning; and freshen your whole look. But what if your mascara
could do even more? What if it could help cure blindness, too?
Bonnie Howland and Hannah Duder are the duo behind New
Zealand’s Indigo & Iris, the self-described “beauty brand that gives
a damn”. After years of research and planning (which began when
Bonnie was just 18 years old), they’ve recently launched their first
official product – a vegan and cruelty-free mascara called Levitate.
Aside from being environmentally sound, the business is sending
good vibes into the world in other ways: half the profits from product
sales go to The Fred Hollows Foundation NZ, an aid organisation
providing sight-restoring surgery to folks in the Pacific Islands.
“It’s this beautiful connection,” Bonnie says of their relationship with
the charity. “You look in the mirror, you put on your mascara, and
you know someone can see again because of it. And it’s not just their
sight they get back – it’s the ability to go to work, for their kids to get
an education, and even just to go to the bathroom by themselves.”
The idea came to Bonnie after a visit to Vanuatu in 2014. On the trip,
she met a young girl who’d dropped out of school to care for her

mother, who had a treatable form of blindness caused by cataracts.
Bonnie discovered that four out of five Pacific Islanders who are
blind don’t actually need to be – in fact, sight-restoring surgery
can cost as little as $25 NZD. Soon after, she was working as a
backstage assistant at New Zealand Fashion Week, and was struck
by the cultural influence of the beauty industry. She decided to find
a way to bridge the two worlds of make-up and altruism – mascara
seemed like the logical fit for her chosen cause.
“I found vegan make-up brands, but none that had personality
and were doing cool stuff with their money. That’s when I had the
idea for Indigo & Iris,” she says. With encouragement from a local
social entrepreneurship program, Bonnie started experimenting
with mascara recipes in her kitchen. Eventually, she dropped out
of uni and moved to Wellington to work full-time on her fledgling
business. Meanwhile, Hannah – whose past projects include a
Tinder-style voting app for young people – came on board as CEO.
As it turns out, Bonnie’s kitchen-made mascara was a
“disaster”, so she found an Italian make-up manufacturer to
help her whip up the perfect formula. A successful Kickstarter
campaign followed, and in January the ladies were able to make
their first $3000 donation to Fred Hollows – enough money to
restore the sight of more than 120 people. “Pushing that send
button was overwhelmingly exciting,” Hannah says. “I’ve got this
overall belief that for the world to get better, corporations need
to step up.”
On a more practical note, the ladies swear their mascara holds
up against traditional brands. “We don’t want people buying
Levitate as a one-off donation only,” Hannah says. “We want them
to buy it because it’s epic.” For the moment, the pair is focused
on mascara, but plans are in the works for eyeshadow palettes
and glossy lip balms, too. One thing is for sure – whatever they
make will do some good. “We’re really looking forward to building
a successful business that has a positive impact on the world,”
Hannah says. “That’s what drives us, and that’s what we get
excited about when we think about the future.”

mascaa for sight


BONNIE HOWLAND AND HANNAH


DUDER HAVE THEIR EYES SET ON


CURING TREATABLE BLINDNESS IN


THE PACIFIC ISLANDS.


Wor d s Kate Stanton

Photo

Charlie Rose

my project
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