Tag: adwoa beauty review

  • Adwoa Beauty’s Founder Story: How Julian Addo Built the Prestige Curl Brand

    Adwoa Beauty’s Founder Story: How Julian Addo Built the Prestige Curl Brand

    Adwoa Beauty Baomint product lineup in editorial product photography

    Adwoa Beauty occupies a specific kind of shelf real estate at Sephora that most Black-founded hair brands have not historically reached. Walk into any flagship Sephora in 2026 and the brand sits in the curl-care wall, not in a partitioned multicultural section, with the signature minimalist packaging running at eye level alongside Briogeo, Bread, and Olaplex. That positioning is the point. Founded by Julian Addo in 2017, Adwoa Beauty arrived at the prestige tier from day one and refused to compete on price – a strategy that almost no other small Black-founded hair brand has been able to execute and survive. The fact that the brand is still on that shelf nine years later, in a category where most independent launches fold within three, is the story worth understanding.

    This piece is about how Addo built that. The founder background that produced the brand, the product range that has held the prestige positioning, where the brand earns the placement, and where there is still room. The textured-hair category right now has a small number of brands operating at the price tier above Cantu and below the dermatology-clinic skincare brands, and Adwoa is the brand most often cited as the prestige-tier reference point alongside Pattern. Worth knowing why.

    The founder before the brand

    Julian Addo is Ghanaian-American. She grew up in the DC area, went to the University of Maryland, and worked in finance and tech before pivoting into beauty. The professional background matters because Adwoa Beauty does not read like a brand built by someone who fell sideways into entrepreneurship – the pricing architecture, the retail-readiness, the formulation patience, all of it has the discipline of someone who spent a decade in operating roles before launching her own thing. Addo named the brand after her own first name in Ghanaian Twi tradition, where Adwoa is the name given to a girl born on a Monday.

    The origin story is the one a lot of Black-founded hair brands share but Addo’s version has a different texture. She had her own hair frustrations through her twenties, tried the mainstream natural-hair brands that existed in the mid-2010s, found the formulations either too heavy, too coating, or too generic for her specific texture, and started researching what actual ingredient-forward formulation would require. The version of the story she has told in press interviews emphasizes the years she spent working with chemists before launching – not the moment of inspiration, the slow back-end work of getting the formulations right.

    She launched the brand in 2017, direct-to-consumer first, then expanded into Sephora in 2018. That Sephora launch was the inflection point. At the time, the textured-hair shelf at Sephora was thin, and most of the credible Black-founded brands were sitting at Ulta or at mass retailers. Adwoa walking into Sephora at a $24-and-up price tier in 2018 was a positioning decision that signaled the brand was not going to play the volume game. Nine years on, that decision is still paying off.

    Julian Addo, founder of Adwoa Beauty, in editorial portrait photography

    What the brand actually does

    Adwoa Beauty makes hair care for Type 3 and Type 4 curl patterns, with a particular concentration on the wash-day-and-refresh part of the routine. The core line is anchored by the Baomint family – leave-in conditioner, deep conditioner, clay-refresh spray, scalp cleanser – all built around a baobab and peppermint base. There are additional product families around protein treatment, styling cream, and oil, but Baomint is the line the brand is known for and the products most reviewers cite first.

    The price tier sits at $24 to $38 for most core products, which is at or slightly above Pattern Beauty and meaningfully above the mass-retailer Black-founded brands. SKU count is intentionally smaller than the major textured-hair brands – roughly fifteen products across the active lineup, versus Pattern’s thirty-plus. That smaller footprint is a strategic choice. Addo has said in interviews that the brand prioritizes formulation depth over line breadth, which translates into a more curated catalog and a longer lead time between new product launches.

    Distribution today: Sephora as the anchor retailer (in-store and Sephora.com), adwoabeauty.com direct, and a handful of independent specialty retailers. Not at Ulta, not at Target, not at any mass-grocery. That retail discipline is the operational version of the price discipline and it has kept the brand sitting in the prestige slot rather than getting absorbed into the general curl-care category.

    Where the brand gets it right

    The first thing Adwoa got right is the Baomint formulation itself. The Baomint Moisturizing Leave-In is the product that built the brand. The texture is lightweight enough to layer under a styler without piling, the slip is enough to detangle on damp hair, and the scent is the specific peppermint-forward note that has become the brand’s olfactory signature. Reviewers who try the leave-in and stay with the brand are usually staying because that one product earned its repurchase, and the rest of the line is built around the credibility of that single SKU.

    The second is the visual identity. The packaging is the cleanest in the category. Matte white tubes and bottles, sage-green accent type, no clutter, no oversold marketing copy on the front of the bottle. Most natural-hair brand packaging defaults to busy color-coding and aggressive front-of-label promises. Adwoa’s packaging looks like a Cuup bra box looks – confident enough not to shout. That matters at the prestige tier. When the product is sitting on a Sephora shelf next to a Briogeo bottle and a Bread Beauty Supply tube, the visual restraint reads as expensive and the brand earns the placement.

    The third is the founder presence without the founder dependency. Addo is centered in the brand’s narrative without being the entire face of every campaign. She does press, she does interviews, she shows up at Sephora events, but the brand does not require her in every photograph to feel coherent. That balance is structurally healthier than the celebrity-founded brands that collapse the moment the celebrity loses interest, and it is the reason Adwoa has the runway to keep growing without a personality-cult vulnerability.

    The fourth is the pace. Adwoa has launched roughly two to three new products per year over its nine-year run, which is well below the industry average and well below what most retailers pressure brands to do. The discipline of resisting the launch-something-every-quarter pressure has kept the line tight and the formulations meaningful rather than performative. The 2021 Blue Tansy Clay-Refresh Spray and the 2023 protein treatment are the two most-cited additions, and both filled real gaps rather than chasing trend ingredients.

    Where there is room

    Honest critique. The price is the price. At $26 for an 8 oz Baomint Leave-In, Adwoa is genuinely expensive for what is functionally a leave-in conditioner, and the value-per-ounce conversation is real. Cantu’s Sulfate-Free Cleansing Cream at $7 does not do the same thing the Adwoa Cleanser does, but the Mielle leave-in at $12 does most of what the Baomint leave-in does for shoppers who are not chasing the specific texture and scent profile. Adwoa’s argument is that the formulation difference is worth the premium, and for a lot of shoppers that argument lands. For others, the math does not.

    Distribution is the other open question. The Sephora-only retail strategy is what made the brand prestige, but it also means that shoppers in markets without a Sephora flagship are functionally locked out of in-store availability. The brand has not expanded into Ulta or any second mass-prestige retailer, and the direct-to-consumer site has had reported shipping and stock-out frustrations in peak seasons. For a brand asking $26 a bottle, the fulfillment experience needs to be consistent and it has not always been.

    And the line is still thinner than the routines of some Type 4 shoppers require. Adwoa skews toward the lighter end of the texture spectrum – the formulations are tuned more toward Type 3 and the looser end of Type 4 than toward the densest 4C textures. The Heavy or Extra-Rich category that Pattern has built out does not have a clear Adwoa equivalent, and Type 4C shoppers who try the brand sometimes leave because the products are not heavy enough for their density. The brand could go further into that part of the texture spectrum and has not yet.

    Adwoa Beauty Baomint Moisturizing Leave-In product hero photograph

    How Adwoa fits in the category

    Adwoa does not exist in isolation, and the brand’s positioning makes more sense in contrast to the rest of the textured-hair prestige tier. Three reference points worth knowing.

    Pattern Beauty is the most direct comparison. Founded by Tracee Ellis Ross and launched at Ulta in 2019, Pattern occupies the same mid-to-prestige price tier with a broader SKU count and a wider distribution footprint. Pattern sits at Ulta and Sephora; Adwoa sits at Sephora only. Pattern has more than thirty products; Adwoa has roughly fifteen. The trade-off: Pattern is the brand to choose if you want a full system from a single line and the security of mass retail availability. Adwoa is the brand to choose if you want a curated, formulation-forward shorter list and you prioritize the specific Baomint texture profile.

    Bread Beauty Supply is the other prestige comparison. Founded by Maeva Heim in Australia and launched at Sephora in 2020, Bread sits at a similar price tier and a similar minimalist visual identity. The product range is narrower than Adwoa’s and the formulations are more focused on the wash-and-condition core of the routine. The trade-off: Bread is arguably the cleaner brand experience for shoppers who want a tight three-or-four-product routine. Adwoa is the more developed line if you want refresh products and treatments alongside the core wash.

    Mielle Organics is the volume comparison. Founded by Monique Rodriguez in 2014, Mielle sits at the mass-retail tier with broader distribution at Target, Walmart, and Sally Beauty. Most Mielle products are $11 to $18 – meaningfully below Adwoa. The trade-off: Mielle is the cost-effective choice with formulations that work for many shoppers. Adwoa is the precision choice for shoppers who want the formulation discipline and are willing to pay for it.

    What to buy from them

    If you are coming to Adwoa Beauty for the first time, the move is not to buy the full system. The line is curated enough that one or two pieces will give you a real read on whether the brand is going to fit your routine. Four products worth knowing about.

    The Adwoa Baomint Moisturizing Leave-In Conditioner at around $26 for 8 oz is the entry point. This is the product that built the brand and the product most shoppers stay for. Layers under a curl cream without piling, slip is real, and the peppermint-forward scent is the brand signature. If you only buy one Adwoa product, this is the one.

    The Adwoa Baomint Deep Conditioner at around $32 for 8 oz is the wash-day treatment. Heavier than the leave-in, slip is strong enough to detangle Type 3 and the looser Type 4 textures, and the deposit is meaningful without coating low-porosity strands. Worth the price if you do a weekly deep treatment as part of your routine.

    The Adwoa Blue Tansy Clay-Refresh Spray at around $30 is the day-two and day-three refresh product, and it is the brand’s most distinctive formulation. The clay base reactivates curl pattern without the dampness that water-only refresh sprays leave behind. Niche but loved by the shoppers who use it.

    The Adwoa Baomint Curl Defining Gel at around $26 is the styler that holds a wash-and-go without crunch on Types 3A through 4A. For denser 4B and 4C textures the gel reads as too light, but for the texture range it is designed for, the hold is consistent and the second-day pattern stays defined.

    And the Adwoa Baomint Scalp Cleanser at around $32 rounds out the wash routine. Cleans without stripping, the peppermint base reads as cooling on the scalp without being aggressive, and the formulation pairs well with the rest of the Baomint family. The fifth purchase if you have already committed to the system.

    Why this brand matters

    Adwoa Beauty is the case study for what a Black-founded hair brand at the prestige tier can look like when the operator has the patience to build slowly and the discipline to resist the volume-and-discount pressure that the category has historically forced on these brands. The textured-hair shelf at Sephora in 2017 was thin. The textured-hair shelf at Sephora in 2026 is not, and Adwoa is part of the reason. The category opened up because brands like Adwoa, Pattern, and Bread proved that the prestige tier could hold Black-founded hair, and the retailers expanded the shelf to make room.

    The lesson for the broader category is structural and worth naming. The brands that will keep winning in textured hair from here forward will not be the ones that try to be everything to every texture at every price point. They will be the ones that pick a position, hold it, build the formulation discipline to earn it, and refuse the pressure to dilute. Julian Addo picked a position in 2017 and has held it for nine years. The receipts are on the Sephora shelf. The Baomint Leave-In, 8 oz, around $26, and the only place it ships from with consistency is Sephora.

  • Adwoa Beauty Review for Plus-Size Women: An Editor’s Honest Take After Three Years

    Adwoa Beauty Review for Plus-Size Women: An Editor’s Honest Take After Three Years

    Adwoa Beauty Baomint shampoo, leave-in, and deep conditioner arranged on a cream linen flat lay

    After three years of covering this category as a reviews editor and eight years before that buying private-label and prestige hair lines for a Midwest department store chain, I have a low bar for being impressed by a new natural-hair brand and a high one for recommending one to a plus-size reader who has to factor more than ingredient lists into the decision. Adwoa Beauty has been in my shower since 2022. I have bought every product in the Baomint line at full retail, with receipts going back to a Sephora order I placed in November of that year. The brand has earned a spot in my rotation. It is not without real frustrations, and the plus-size-specific considerations almost no other reviewer talks about belong in the assessment.

    This review focuses on the three Baomint products that get repurchased most often by women I have helped shop the line for, with a deliberate eye on the questions plus-size women actually ask me when I recommend it: yield per bottle, ergonomics on shoulders that fatigue during long detangling sessions, and whether the price holds up next to Pattern Beauty, Mielle Organics, and Camille Rose.

    Quick verdict

    Rating: 4 out of 5. Worth it for Type 3 to 4 hair that needs deep slip and consistent moisture, especially if your wash day already runs 90 minutes and you want a leave-in that spreads instead of dragging. Best for: anyone doing their own protective styling, anyone with shoulder or upper-back fatigue who needs products that work in fewer passes, and anyone fed up with watery leave-ins that disappear before they coat the strand. Skip if: you have low-porosity 4C hair that rejects creamy leave-ins without heat, or you need a budget pick under $20. Primary recommendation: Adwoa Beauty Baomint Moisturizing Leave-in Conditioner at Sephora , $24 for 8 oz, 60-day return window.

    What Adwoa Beauty is and why the brand matters

    Adwoa Beauty was founded by Julian Addo, a Ghanaian-American entrepreneur who built the brand around her own salon experience and a frustration with curl products that either over-promised moisture or coated the hair without delivering it. The line launched in 2017 and grew through Sephora’s clean-beauty category before going wide at Ulta. The Baomint range is built on baobab oil, peppermint oil, and a moisturizing humectant base, with a tingly scalp feel the brand leans into as part of the experience.

    The clean-ingredient screen is real: no sulfates in the shampoo, no parabens, no silicones, no mineral oil. The pH sits in the slightly-acidic 4 to 5 range that helps seal a textured cuticle. The brand discloses its full ingredient list in plain English, not the buried-in-tiny-print style most prestige brands default to. I price products on margin and on ingredient quality, and Adwoa lands cleanly on both measures for the tier.

    My experience with the Baomint line

    I started with the Baomint Moisturizing Leave-in Conditioner on a Sunday in November 2022. I had been using Camille Rose Honey Hydrate as my default leave-in for two years and wanted to test whether the Adwoa hype was real or another influencer launch with eighteen months of TikTok runway. I bought the 8-oz bottle from Sephora at $24, used a Beauty Insider birthday discount, and got it in three days. First wash day, I parted my hair into six sections, applied two pumps per section to soaking-wet hair, and the slip was immediate. Detangling took twelve minutes instead of the twenty-five I usually budget. The peppermint tingle is real and lasts about ninety seconds, which I personally like and my mother actively hates.

    I kept it in the rotation through 2023, picked up the Baomint Deep Conditioning Hair Masque in February, and added the Baomint Moisture Plus Conditioning Shampoo in May. The leave-in is what kept me. The deep conditioner is good. The shampoo is fine. I want to be honest about that gap because the brand markets the line as a coordinated system and the products are not equally strong.

    For plus-size readers asking the specific questions: my shoulders cooperate with the leave-in pump in a way they did not with the squeeze tube on my old Camille Rose. I have rotator-cuff issues from a 2021 fall that make reaching back to the crown of my head tiring during long detangling sessions. The pump dispenses on one push, the formula spreads with three or four finger strokes per section, and I am not gripping a bottle and squeezing repeatedly. That is a small ergonomic detail that compounds over a 45-minute detangling window. I have recommended the line to two friends with chronic shoulder pain from years of doing their own protective styling and both reported the same observation in their first month.

    On yield: the 8-oz leave-in lasts me 6 to 7 weeks at one wash a week. The deep conditioner lasts about ten. The shampoo, thinnest of the three, lasts four to five. For the thick, dense, mid-back-length hair I am working with, that yield is competitive with Camille Rose and better than Pattern Beauty’s per-ounce price.

    Black woman with Type 4A natural hair applying Adwoa Beauty Baomint Moisturizing Leave-in Conditioner to a sectioned strand

    What works

    The leave-in is the standout. The slip is the best in this price tier, the formula does not flake or pill under a gel applied over it, and the moisture holds through day three of a wash-and-go in dry Chicago winter air. Most leave-ins in the $20 to $30 range lose hydration by day two on Type 4 hair in low humidity. The Baomint formula has a humectant blend that pulls and holds water more efficiently than the Camille Rose Honey Hydrate I had been using, and it does it without the heavy build I get from some prestige tier products.

    The deep conditioner does what a $32 masque should do. Fifteen minutes under a plastic cap, twenty under a hooded dryer if you want to push it, and the hair feels conditioned without being coated. I have used Briogeo Don’t Despair Repair in the same role for years and the Adwoa masque holds its own. Not a clear winner over Briogeo, not a loser either.

    The brand’s customer service is responsive. I had a leaky pump on a 2023 order, emailed support with a photo, and had a replacement on its way within forty-eight hours, no return required. That is the kind of operational tell that distinguishes a brand built for the long haul from one running on launch-mode marketing.

    What doesn’t work, honestly

    The shampoo is the weakest link. The lather is minimal, consistent with a sulfate-free formula, but the cleanse is also light. For anyone using oil-based scalp treatments, edge control, or buildup-prone leave-ins, the Baomint shampoo will not deep-clean in a single wash. I do a clarifying wash with a different product every third or fourth wash day, which is fine as a routine but should not be necessary at $26 for 8 oz.

    The peppermint tingle is divisive in a way the brand does not fully address. I enjoy it. Two of the four friends I have recommended the line to actively dislike it, one to the point of returning the product. If you are scalp-sensitive or you have a condition like seborrheic dermatitis or psoriasis, the peppermint oil can aggravate it. There is no peppermint-free version of the Baomint line. If the tingle is a hard no for you, Pattern Beauty is the safer alternative.

    The price is on the high side of mid-tier. At $24 for 8 oz of leave-in, you are paying $3 per ounce, more than Mielle Organics at $1.80 per ounce for the Pomegranate and Honey leave-in. The Adwoa product is a step ahead of Mielle for slip and longevity, but the price-to-performance gap is not a runaway win. If you are budgeting strictly, this is a stretch buy.

    Pump bottles run dry with product still in them. The 8-oz leave-in bottle stops pumping with roughly a half ounce left in the bottom. I have to unscrew the pump, scoop the remainder with a spatula, and decant it into a jar. At $24 a bottle, that is annoying.

    How it compares to Pattern Beauty, Mielle Organics, and Camille Rose

    I have used all three of these brands extensively, in some cases for years before Adwoa entered my rotation. Here is the honest side-by-side.

    Pattern Beauty Hydration Shampoo and Leave-In Conditioner. Pattern was founded by Tracee Ellis Ross and the formulations are excellent. The Pattern leave-in is slightly heavier than the Adwoa Baomint, which works better for high-density Type 4 hair that needs more weight to define, and the shampoo cleans more thoroughly than the Baomint shampoo. Price is comparable at $25 for the leave-in. If your hair is dense and protein-strong and you want a leave-in that doubles as a styler, Pattern is the answer. If you want a lighter leave-in that layers under a curl cream, Adwoa wins. Pattern Beauty Leave-In Conditioner at Ulta , with a 60-day return on opened products.

    Mielle Organics Pomegranate and Honey Leave-In Conditioner. Mielle is significantly cheaper, at around $11 for a 12-oz bottle, and it is a real workhorse for moisture. Where it loses to Adwoa: the slip is not as good for detangling, the scent is more polarizing (heavier on the honey-and-pomegranate fragrance), and the formula pills under some gels. Mielle is the answer if your budget is tight and you want a basic moisturizing leave-in that gets the job done. Adwoa is the upgrade if detangling time and product layering matter to your routine. Mielle Organics Pomegranate and Honey Leave-In at Amazon , 30-day standard return, 90 days on apparel-tagged categories.

    Camille Rose Honey Hydrate Leave-In Conditioner. Camille Rose has been my long-term default for years and the Honey Hydrate is excellent for moisture retention on Type 4 hair. Where Adwoa pulled ahead: slip during wet detangling, longevity of moisture in dry winter air, and pump-bottle ergonomics. Camille Rose at $20 for 8 oz is a slightly better per-ounce price and the formula is heavier, which some readers will prefer. If you do not need the slip improvement and you like a richer leave-in feel, Camille Rose remains a strong pick. Camille Rose Honey Hydrate Leave-In at Target , 90-day return policy.

    Who should buy and who should skip

    Buy if you have Type 3B through Type 4B hair that needs reliable slip for detangling, you wash weekly or every other week, and you are willing to pay mid-tier prices for a clean-ingredient line. Buy if shoulder or arm fatigue during long wash days is a real factor for you, because the pump dispenser and the high-yield formula make a difference. Buy if you have already cycled through Mielle and Camille Rose and you want an upgrade in slip and moisture longevity without jumping to a prestige tier. Buy if you appreciate a peppermint-forward sensory experience and a clean ingredient list you do not have to magnifying-glass.

    Skip if you have low-porosity Type 4C hair that rejects creamy leave-ins without steam or heat assist, because the Baomint formula will sit on the strand instead of penetrating. Skip if you are scalp-sensitive or have seborrheic dermatitis, eczema, or psoriasis, because the peppermint oil is concentrated enough to aggravate those conditions. Skip if you are budget-shopping and need to keep wash-day product cost under $50 a month, because three Adwoa products will run you closer to $80.

    Four natural hair leave-in conditioners compared side by side: Adwoa Beauty Baomint, Pattern Beauty, Mielle Organics, and Camille Rose Honey Hydrate

    Where to buy and what to pay

    Adwoa Beauty is carried at Sephora, Ulta, Amazon, and the brand’s own site. Pricing is consistent across retailers: Baomint Moisturizing Leave-in Conditioner at $24 for 8 oz, Baomint Deep Conditioning Hair Masque at $32 for 8 oz, Baomint Moisture Plus Conditioning Shampoo at $26 for 8 oz. Sephora is my default because Beauty Insider points stack and the 60-day return policy covers full refunds on opened products if the brand does not work for your hair. Ulta sometimes bundles the masque with the leave-in during the 21 Days of Beauty event, which knocks the pair into the low-$40 range together. Amazon stocks the line but I would not start there because counterfeit risk on prestige hair brands is real and the return window is shorter.

    Frequently asked questions

    Is Adwoa Beauty good for plus-size women specifically?

    The plus-size relevance is not about formula, it is about ergonomics and product yield. The pump dispenser reduces strain during long detangling sessions, the high slip cuts detangling time, and the per-bottle yield holds up for mid-back-length thick hair. Those are the practical considerations that matter when your wash routine takes longer because your hair is denser or because shoulder fatigue is a factor. The formula itself works on any compatible curl type regardless of body size.

    Will it work on relaxed or color-treated hair?

    Yes. The Baomint Deep Conditioning Hair Masque is the strongest play for chemically processed hair because it delivers moisture without protein overload. The leave-in works fine on relaxed hair. The shampoo is gentle enough not to strip color. For heavily damaged hair, pair it with a separate bond-builder like Olaplex No. 3 or K18 because Adwoa does not market the Baomint line as a bond-repair system.

    Can I use the leave-in daily for refreshing?

    Yes, with a caveat. The formula is light enough to use for daily refreshing without buildup, but a half pump diluted in a spray bottle with water is more economical than dispensing a full pump every day. The 8-oz bottle will not last you the projected six weeks if you use a full pump for daily refreshing.

    Does the peppermint tingle hurt?

    It tingles, it does not hurt. For most people it is a pleasant cooling sensation that fades in about ninety seconds. For scalp-sensitive readers or anyone with active inflammation, the peppermint oil can aggravate the scalp. If you are not sure, do a patch test on a quarter-sized area before committing to a full wash.

    Final verdict

    Worth it for the leave-in. The Baomint Moisturizing Leave-in Conditioner earns its $24 price tag through slip, longevity, and a pump dispenser that genuinely matters for anyone managing wash-day fatigue. The deep conditioner is a solid second buy. The shampoo is the weakest part of the system and I would either skip it or buy it once to test. Start with one bottle of the Adwoa Beauty Baomint Leave-In at Sephora , give it three wash days, and decide from there. Worth it at $24.