Heather Marks for Red Magazine, February 2017 Photography: Daniel Thomas Smith Stylist: Oonagh Brennan Hair: Heath Massi Makeup: Ruby Hammer Manicure: Emma Welsh
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Heather Marks for Red Magazine, February 2017 Photography: Daniel Thomas Smith Stylist: Oonagh Brennan Hair: Heath Massi Makeup: Ruby Hammer Manicure: Emma Welsh
Follow WOMEN:Â https://www.instagram.com/womenmanagementny/

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At Home Beauty
With MilliOnAir Beauty Editor Ruby Hammer MBE
At Home Beauty
May beauty columns are usually packed with Summer looks, new shades, trends and textures but in view of all that we are currently facing globally I want to address what is relevant now. Taking the time for self care could bring you out of lockdown with radiant skin, healthy hair and new makeup skills to rival pros.Â
SKINCARE
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An Interview With International Makeup Artist Ruby Hammer
It's most likely that you will have heard of the makeup brand Ruby & Millie - it was an incredibly successful brand that was created in partnership with Boots. What you might not know is that Ruby, who helped to make it so successful, also launched other brands into the UK, such as Tweezerman and Aveda - and I don't need to tell you how successful they have been, as I'm sure you're aware. Ruby is also a very successful international makeup artist, has recently launch "Ruby Hammer Recommends" with Debenhams and on top of all that is a mother. It's fair to say that she must be one very busy lady!
In 2007 Ruby was awarded an MBE by the Queen and boy does she deserve it. She's a role model and inspiration to all women and I wanted to find out how she's managed to get to where she is today.
This is a fantastic interview and I hope you will feel inspired by it.
Find out more about Ruby Hammer Recommends here.Â
What made you decide to become a make-up artist?
Well, it was a fluke actually. Iâve always loved makeup from a child watching my mum. My mum was very young when she had me. She was 17 so Iâve always seen her getting ready with eyelashes and short wigs, big hairpieces, this-and-that all through the â60s. I was fascinated by it and I loved how she looked and how she changed herself. This was all in Nigeria which is where I was born. Then we moved to this country. Iâve always been conscious of fashion and trying makeup on. Weâre immigrants. My father was a doctor. Makeup was not thought of as a career. I just didnât think of it. Itâs just a passion and a love. I loved doing it; same as my mum. It wasnât something that I was going to make a living from. So I went to university and I got an Economics degree. Itâs only when I finished the degree that I met my boyfriend. He was my boyfriend who became my husband. By chance, I met a friend of his who was a makeup artist and I assisted her - it came out of the blue. It wasnât like a formal âThis is what Iâm going to do.â I looked at the magazines. I knew who the makeup artists were. I copied their makeup on myself and on my friends when going out. Itâs only then when I met this lady when she needed an assistant one day at London Fashion Week in â84, I just said, âOh, I can helpâ so she thought she could use me and said, âAll right, Iâll see you at the Duke of York tent at 5:00â or something ridiculous. My face mustâve blanched. â5:00?!â She said, âWell, thereâs 25 girls and we got to get them ready by 9:30.â I just turned up and I assisted. From there, you sort of test if itâs a fit. As I would say, the rest is history.
Wow! So how did you go from becoming a makeup artist to launching your own beauty products?
Itâs all an evolution. Thereâs no game plan like âOh, Iâll follow this and then you follow this and then you go from group A to group B.â During the first year, I had to establish myself as a makeup artist. I was a young wife and then I was a mother very early. Iâve had the family. Then In the meantime, my ex-husband and I were launching Aveda and in doing all of that, it just means your eyes and ears are peeled. Iâm establishing as a makeup artist but when the opportunity comes and you know youâve got the right stuff or whatever, the opportunity came. It came for both me and Millie. You know, it just came and I took the opportunity. Itâs not a game plan like âTomorrow, I plan to conquer the world.â It comes and you think, âAll right, Iâm not scared of that.â
Do you think the opportunities come because youâre working so hard in the right place?
Yeah. I think youâre open to them because obviously, thatâs what we were doing. Ruby & Millie was just a chance to do what we do for other people but with ourselves at the forefront. What youâre doing as a makeup artist is youâre helping launch, establish, publicise and market somebody elseâs brand. We know all the tools of how to do it. The opportunity came by groups backing us to say, âHere you go, girls. Weâre going to put it towards you. What do you think?â So we had to think very hard. Oh, my God. This is much more of a commitment because itâs all about you. But we went with it. I went with it.
Youâve worked with Millie Kendall for over 15 years â what kept the partnership so strong?
I worked with her for longer because she used to do the PR for Aveda, for Tweezerman and all those other brands that we used to have a distributorship in. Sheâd get all the PR for those. Thatâs how I know her. Then the Ruby & Millie thing is an extension of that. Now sheâs done something different. I do Ruby Hammer Recommends. Itâs always evolving, isnât it? Things move on. Nothing ever stays exactly the same. Itâs not a formula. I donât want people to just sit there and think itâs some sort of formula that weâre just following. What kept the partnership strong is because we both got the same level of passion about cosmetics and the beauty business in general. We have different strengths and weaknesses and when we work together, it just became stronger. I can put my assets into place and she can put hers in place. This has worked out for us so far. Itâs a process. There are going to be other projects youâre going to see that sheâs going to do herself and Iâll do myself because thatâs how it is. If there are things we can do together, weâll do them. If not, itâs just the way life goes on. Weâre not joined at the hip that it goes on like that forever and ever.
Whatâs the key to launching a successful brand?
We launched those: Aveda, Tweerzerman, Mr. Mascara, LâOccitane. My husband was in the trade originally but he had come from the Sanctuary background. When weâve done all of these things, we know how to work, you know, how to market without having tons of money so we did it by PR. Millie was really good, too, in that. Iâm very good at PR as well because Iâm the first vulture out there. I am actually on the shoot with the editors doing it, not just getting in the first release. We fought that battle on many different fronts. The key to developing a successful brand is first, youâve got to have something worthy of success. You canât do it with a bad product. You can develop it and launch it and PR it all you want but eventually, it will fall flat on its ass because it has to have some intrinsic success or something good about it. If people are saying itâs great, itâs hallowed ground. It has to have something good about it. Itâs got to be unique. Timing sometimes is just the way Aveda has come at that time. Today, now, Tweezerman or tweezing is just a tool thatâs taking care of your eyebrows. Now, youâve got waxing. Youâve got threading which didnât exist five or six years ago. Itâs timing. Itâs also if youâre the first, on the forefront of something. Whatever people want to say about Ruby & Millie â whether itâs gone out of reach now or some of this or that â we did do something that was unique at the time. Itâs a group brand that we launched to hold its own next to Chanel and Yves St. Laurent. Yet if you go to your local booth, a big one - it canât be a foxy one, it had to be a big one â you couldnât get that. Now, if you go to a booth, there is Chanel and Yves St. Laurent in a big store. That did not exist until we did that kind of thing.
So would your advice to someone launching a product be âMake sure you have a good quality productâ?
Make sure you have a good quality product. Itâs got to have some unique aspect to it. Youâve got to think - have you got money to do PR, market it and advertise? Advertisement costs a lot of money. How are you going to launch it? What marketplaces? Thereâs no point having something cheap and try to put it in the big department stores. Youâve got to really know your game plan about your product. Is it mass? Is it low-end? Is it high-end? Look at Tom Ford. His eyeshadows are ÂŁ48 or whatever but he is Tom Ford. He can launch in all the lovely, lovely department stores. Thereâs no point in him going in Boots. It will not be a success no matter how great that product is. Then your product has to have some backbone. Is it PR-able? Are you going to do it via celebrities? Is there a spokesperson? Is the product going to speak for itself? Is it word-of-mouth? What is it?
Throughout your business journey, what would you say was your biggest challenge has been so far?
Well, I think the biggest challenge is that although you see Ruby & Millie as ours - we did all the work - but itâs not our brand, we didnât own it. Youâre doing it for somebody. Thereâs always going to be that bit of friction when you donât totally own something and youâre not totally in control of something. With Ruby & Millie, the good thing about it is weâve seen eye to eye in everything. If we hadnât, we would have had a problem, wouldnât we? Itâs always about who is in charge. If youâre fully in charge and youâre making decisions and they bring you the success, itâs all fine. What if youâre making the right decisions but theyâre not yours and somebody else dilutes that or takes it away from you, then you donât get the full benefit. Youâre frustrated and you canât do anything about it because you donât own it and you havenât got the money to just buy back from them. Or, when youâre in the marketplace, one of the hardest things is to just sustain it. Weâve been there for that long.  Are you going to last year in and year out? You do have to take your hats off to the Estee Lauders of the world or Bobbi Brown who has come a long way since she started, you know. Anybody and his uncle will come to a launch. Every magazine will write about it, but are they going to be there three years later, and years later, and years later? Itâs not easy.
Aside from the challenges, whatâs been your biggest achievement so far?
I think it would be receiving my MBE in 2007 from the Queen for my services in the cosmetic industry.
That must have been a very proud moment for you
Very, very proud. Even as a makeup artist and you got shoots for this magazine, thatâs unbelievable because you canât pay or bribe somebody to be on that shoot. Youâre chosen to do it and you expect thereâd critics to see it. Itâs still an opinion. I might love it and somebody else might hate it. I have to take that onboard, havenât I? âLovely makeup on those lovely picturesâ but somebody else may comment âTheyâre bloody awful.â They have their right to say that, havenât they? Itâs an opinion. Itâs a taste. Itâs a view. But when you get something from the Queen, itâs like whatever happens I didnât bribe or buy my way. Iâve just been given something and that is really, really powerful.
How do you keep yourself motivated through challenging times?
I think we have moments when we do really well and other moments when it does get overwhelming. Youâve got to sort of walk away from it, even have a little cry but realise deep down âI love what I doâ. This is what I want to do. I might feel overwhelmed or feel under pressure from personal or health or your loved ones or just from travelling. When you stand back, you realise would you want to do something else? Do you want to give up and do something else? At this moment, no. This is what I want. That is self-motivating enough. Otherwise, Iâd just give it up and be in an ashram somewhere else or teach yoga, you know what I mean? Ask yourself what else would you do? If your answer is âThere are 50 other things and Iâm just doing this to get paid for it and thatâs thatâ, then I will have to think through a different way to go and do something else. You mustnât ignore that difficult question when it comes up. For me, so far, this is all I still want to do. The love of this is stronger than whatever challenges come up.
Why do you think youâve been so successful?
I think for exactly all the things weâve said. I work hard. Iâm very clear to identify what is my passion. By putting my all in it, I get the reward for it. I feel lucky. I have faith in God. I feel my success is not at the expense of breaking someone down or taking it away or snatching it or badmouthing someone. I just do it through my own effort and my mumâs prayers, trying to do the right thing with integrity and itâs paid me a reward. You know what? Iâm not ashamed to say there must be something to being at the right place at the right time and just good fortune - I donât knock that. I worked very hard for it. It hasnât all just landed on my plate. But Iâm not so full of myself that I donât see with humility. Iâve been lucky. Iâve been blessed. I take that and try to give back as much as I can.
Does anyone inspire you?
My mother inspires me, her philosophical way of being, how she copes with life. From the first female role model, it is an inspiration. It doesnât just mean you all have to die and be no longer living. My daughter inspires me. She is in our sphere now and sheâs amazing, she really inspires me. Then you look at other businesswomen like Diane Von Furstenberg out there. She had it all and then it all came down to nothing and she built it back up again and itâs all amazing. As soon as you know anyoneâs story of how they got there and how they still hang on in there, youâve got to be inspired.
Do you have a favourite quote?
I have one of my own; âIn life, in health, and in beauty â I believe the key is balance.â For anything, I really do believe youâve got to have some balance. You canât just be crazy about everything. If youâre able to have that, youâll be all right.
So how do you manage to balance?
Again, like I said, I donât want to be somebody who sits there and says, âYou know what? I got 50 answers.â I struggle the same as everybody, but I try to meditate. I try to eat well. I try to sleep. Iâm having a bit of trouble with the sleep now because I realize Iâm pre-menopausal. Itâs coming there so my sleep isnât as good as it used to be. Before, I just hit the pillow - boom! Now, itâs not like that. I try and have facials. I try and have deep tissue massage. I try and read. I listen to music. I go to movies. I do things that give you joy, like being with your family and your loved ones and your friends. Travel. All of those things, I try and do. All Iâm doing is trying to find that balance. And itâs a balance thatâs not finite, like âThatâs it. Iâve achieved it today. Tomorrow, youâve got to manage it again, donât you?â Until the day we go from this world, itâs an ongoing battle or struggle to achieve that balance.
Definitely, I agree that meditation is going to help.
It will help. But you know what? Sometimes your mind is so restless that you donât do a good meditation but youâll have to go through the motions because whatever youâre doing is better than nothing. One day, youâll have a very peaceful, really powerful experience and on other days, itâs just a load of rubbish like you think itâs hogwash. But you know what? Thatâs still better than not attempting it.
So whatâs next for you?
Well, my new thing is Ruby Hammer Recommends. Itâs a gifting range exclusive to Debenhams nationwide. It just launched in September. Thatâs a really lovely one that Iâm looking forward to. Itâs a big, big thing and weâre coming up in Christmas. At Debenhams, itâs really, really successful. Itâs very exciting for me to tie up and do that.
These are products youâve chosen?
Theyâre chosen with them. Obviously in gifting, itâs price-led. You have to bear in mind who the Debenhams customer is, what theyâve had success with. Theyâre kits, not individual items. Usually, people want value for money and that kind of thing. Within that, Iâll do the best I can in that price range to do something that has excitement, hopefully get Debenhams new customers without alienating the existing one. If this works out well, we might do a better range for them. I donât know. These are all opportunities and chances.