OPI Just Launched Its First Vegan Nail Polish Collection vegnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vegnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Nail polish brand Àuda.B recently launched at luxury department store chain Nordstrom. This is the first Black-owned vegan nail polish brand to partner with the department store. The gel-like nail lacquer is also 10-free, gluten-free, and PETA-certified. Nordstrom carries 17 of Àuda.B’s best-selling colors ($18 each) curated specifically for Nordstrom, with color names such as #Blackgirlmagic, Bad Girls Shut It Down, Front Row, and Rich Boss Lady. The brand also offers its Jetsetter Nail Polish Top Coat ($20) and Glam Nail Care Kit ($125) featuring five essential polishes including the top coat, base coat, cuticle oil, and two neutral polish colors. The products are available through the Nordstrom website by searching “Auda.B” or “nail lacquer.”
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Take what you need : Refrigerators start popping up in Denver
As the pandemic ravaged almost every single part of society, itâs also highlighted and expanded a need in our community: food insecurity. One volunteer-based project is looking to address that need in the short term through community fridges.
and last updated 2021-03-17 10:53:33-04
DENVER â As the pandemic ravaged almost every single part of society, itâs also highlighted and expanded a need in our community: food insecurity. One volunteer-based project is looking to address that need in the short term through community fridges.
âWe want to make sure people donât have to make the choice between paying rent and feeding their families,â Eli Zain, founder of the Denver Community Fridges Project, told Denver7.
Denver Community Fridge program expands amid pandemic
By JOHN WENZELJanuary 16, 2021 GMT
Jim Norris is loving the Denver Community Fridge program despite having reservations at the start.
“Any trepidation I had about (negative) neighborhood reactions or people abusing it are gone,” he said recently on the one-month anniversary of the fridge’s debut outside his store at Ellsworth Street and South Broadway. “In fact, I’m surprised at how it’s taken off.”
When 24-year-old Eli Zain, founder of Denver Community Fridge, emailed Norris months ago about hosting the fridge, Norris immediately said “yes.” The idea of stocking fresh, donated food for food-insecure residents and unhoused people was something he was already working on thanks to Mar Williams’ Squash the System, a donation cart offering free, fresh vegetables. (Now, in the winter months, it’s a canned-food program.)