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    Home»Fashion»In 2024, a “From the Vault” Beauty Trend Is Well Underway
    Fashion

    In 2024, a “From the Vault” Beauty Trend Is Well Underway

    By AdminSeptember 29, 2024
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    In 2024, a “From the Vault” Beauty Trend Is Well Underway


    Never underestimate a makeup enthusiast on a mission to sniff out a discontinued staple. They’ll track it vigorously from the depths of Reddit, snag it from international discount sales, barter with third-party sellers offering resale values upward of $300, and even start petitions for brands to resurrect the cult classic. (Yes, really!) Bloodhounds have nothing on a riled-up beauty fan.

    I’m now thrilled to report that, for many, all that work has paid off. Over the past few months, a slew of beauty brands have relaunched their old icons, dusting them off from the vault and bestowing OG devotees with exactly what they’ve been begging for. Beauty trends have always been cyclical (give it a few years, and what’s old-fashioned becomes shiny and cool once again), but now, so are the formulas themselves. Mission accomplished, beauty fans—major relics are making a triumphant comeback in 2024.

    (Image credit: Getty Images / Dave Benett)

    Take a scroll through Reddit, and you’ll likely notice multiple frustrated users (understandably so) wondering why brands discontinue their icons in the first place. If a product is selling like hotcakes, why would they ever give up such a winner?

    The answer isn’t so cut-and-dried. Some brands choose to pivot ingredient lists, as in the case of Fekkai’s Brilliant Glossing Styling Créme. “At the time, we were transitioning toward cleaner, more sustainable formulations to align with the growing demand for eco-conscious beauty,” founder and celebrity hairstylist Frédéric Fekkai tells me. For others, production pains played a role, like key ingredients becoming too expensive or supply chain delays (a phrase that has unfortunately become all too familiar since 2020).

    “We first launched the Revlon Super Lustrous Glass Shine Lipstick in 2020, and it was an instant hit, going viral on TikTok—but then the pandemic hit,” recounts Kelly Solomon, Revlon’s chief digital marketing officer. Unable to deliver the product in the same quantities and pace, the brand ultimately decided to discontinue it, much to the distress of Redditers who swore it was comparable to Chanel. (Although, they’re in luck: Super Lustrous Glass Shine is officially set to relaunch this November!)

    Vincent Oquendo applying lipstick on a model

    Makeup artist Vincent Oquendo using Super Lustrous Glass Shine backstage at NYFW

    Plus, well, the market changes—and so do makeup routines. Urban Decay, for example, decided to build upon its beloved Naked eye shadow palette with similar iterations—such as Naked2 Basics and Naked3 Soft Pinks—while the original 12-pan palette was phased out in 2018. “We did underestimate the love for it from our fans and community,” says Arnaud Kerviche, Urban Decay’s VP of marketing, but at the time, it made sense the team would evolve the palette as the shoppers themselves did.

    What they didn’t expect were the countless comments begging the brand to bring back the original or photos of users proudly displaying their decrepit 13-year-old palettes. (While using eye shadow that’s older than members of Gen Alpha is questionable, I do applaud the dedication.)