In today’s beauty industry, finding a brand that truly caters to the unique needs of Latinas is scarce. That’s where Ann Murray-Dunning, the founder of Vamigas, steps in as a disrupter. As a Latina beauty entrepreneur, she and her partner Christina Kelmon are making waves by providing clean, natural solutions for specific skin issues that affect Latinas. Vamigas is a Latina-owned clean skincare brand that just launched at Target, and its products are now available in nearly 600 stores nationwide.
The brand had a great start, going viral with the hashtag #latinaTikTok, quickly gaining popularity among Latina TikTok users and amassing over one million views. Their success can be attributed to their unique vision of reclaiming the naturally derived, organic, and green beauty ingredients from their ancestral lands. Think Yerba Mate, Maracuja, Chilean Rosehip Babassu, Pataua, Prickly Pear, and Chia from Chile, Mexico, Peru, Brazil, Ecuador and more, with no added fragrances. What sets Vamigas apart is its focus on solving hyperpigmentation, a common problem many Latinas face; this makes them a brand that genuinely cares about the needs of its customers.
HOLA! USA had the opportunity to ask Ann Murray-Dunning some questions and delve into her journey as a beauty entrepreneur and her thoughts about the importance of clean beauty products for the Hispanic women.
HOLA!: Why is clean beauty so essential in general and for Latinas in particular?
Ann: Get ready for an eye-opening ride. Scientific research and the FDA link certain hormone-disrupting ingredients used in personal care products to things like cancer, fertility issues, diabetes, neurological disorders, allergies, and more. Hormone disrupting chemicals are certain ingredients that may cause things like cancer or diabetes with long term use. We say may cause, because the research that’s done is correlational in nature, and causation is always very hard to prove.
The latest issue is that in 2022 the FDA found worrisome levels of mercury in skin lightening creams, and discovered that some hair straightening products released formaldehyde, a hazardous material that’s associated with neurological effects that is a classified carcinogen.
“Guess who uses more skin lightening creams for hyperpigmentation (we know them as manchas)? Latinas.”
Not only that but us Latinas have been found to have more of these hormone-disruptors in our bodies. Many studies have made this connection but two are the most eye-opening: First, a UCSF research study found that the Latina participants in the study had higher rates of hormone disrupting chemicals in their system when tested during pregnancy.
The Hermosa study, at Berkeley, found higher rates of these chemicals in teenaged Latinas, but also found that levels dropped when the girls stopped using products with phthalates, parabens, triclosan and oxybenzone. That drop is a huge red flag. But again, the connection isn’t super clear and so not much information is out there yet.
“The most preventative thing you could do right now is to start cutting out products that have these chemicals, being careful with the products you buy, and swap some of these products for natural, easy versions that you can even make in your own kitchen, using ingredients you already have - and that señoras have been making for centuries.”
But if you don’t have time for that (few people do!), what’s easier is to make sure you’re always reading the ingredients in your skincare and haircare and body care, and making sure you’re not seeing any red flags in the list.
HOLA!: Your products use naturally derived, organic, green beauty ingredients. Tell us more...
Ann: Our philosophy is that the closer to nature the ingredient (or “green”) the less likely to have been linked by research to risky outcomes. This is a touchy subject, though, because sometimes even natural ingredients may cause allergic reactions, so “natural” is not always best, but it’s usually a good bet.
Also, we want to preface this by saying that we are not in any way against chemicals. We love science and medicine, and chemicals have helped usher us into the modern world. Chemicals have gotten a bad rap.
“But some beauty ingredients have been linked to health problems and that should be concerning to anyone using them.”
HOLA!: Could you recommend the best natural ingredients for the most common issues or skin types?
Ann: Here are our recommendations for natural ingredients and skin types:
- Oily skin: Rosehip, rose petal, avocado oil, vitamin E, jojoba
- Sensitive skin: Lavender, shea butter, rosehip, argan, cactus, pomegranate, chamomile, calendula
- Dry skin: Olive leaf, lavender, shea butter, maqui, acai, aloe, babassu, chia, rosehip
- Aging skin: Rosehip, maqui, acai, chia