AMBERmag.com: When you look back on your career, what stands out to you?
SF: I’ve been around for more than 20 years. I started out doing every one like Brooke Shields but became known for doing black women. And these women never left me. I never felt like I was a trend, I never had to feel like I needed to bring my resume. Naomi [Campbell] knew I was good and that was enough for her to hire me without asking for a resume. When I was 27 and I wrote "Fine Beauty." And that said I’m here to stay and I'm dedicating myself to you.
AMBERmag.com: I recall a discussion where Veronica Webb said you all (her, Oscar James, Chuck Amos), came up together. And how important it was to surround yourself with people who were talented and who get it?
SF: That is absolutely true. We stuck together and helped each other to grow and get work. And that's so important. Fran Cooper introduced me to Naomi Campbell, and hairstylist James Harris introduced me to Naomi Sims. I introduced Oscar James to Veronica Webb, Tyra Banks and Vanessa Williams. This business is very cyclical. Naomi Campbell would request me. She would say "I want him" and that’s fierce. They would want her to use someone else and she would say, "No, I have my team and here they are." And that makes all the difference.
AMBERmag.com: And you guys did amazing work.
SF: And we did amazing work. I remember Naomi was asking for a "Vogue" cover and she said Linda Evangelista told her don't be afraid to ask for what you want. I’ve never forgotten that. Those girls stuck together and they helped Naomi to get many opportunities that she was being shut out of. There is so much else going on behind the scenes.
AMBERmag.com: What have your clients taught you the most?
SF: So to be able to talk to my clients in a very real way is a blessing. Because it was while working with my celebrity clients that I really learned about not taking things for granted. Those responses that women who have read my book or other makeup artists have said to me are so heart-felt; I’m never so overwhelmed that I can't address them. We were never in touch with people like we are today so I don’t take it for granted nor is it taken lightly. Because even the most negative review, I grow from that. The level of communication that I can have with Monique, Queen Latifah, Iman, is a conversation with women who have broken barriers. They have withstood the test of time. So when I have a conversation with them, it’s very different from other makeup artists because their struggles are very similar to my own.
AMBERmag.com: What does power mean to you?
SF: Real power is being able to utilize it in a way that is effective. Being able to reach this consumer. I don’t need to be validated by anyone other than my consumer. The way that I have been able to wield power in this industry has been through an untraditional route. There is no way that at 27 I would have a best-selling book and when I walk into MAC to shop, I can be completely unrecognizable, but girls walk up to me crying because they know what I do. I look forward to touring and meeting this consumer in a way in which she can receive information because there is credibility in that and there is power in that relationship.
Fashion Fair is sold in department stores such as Macy's and online at Fashionfair.com.
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