Lush (company)
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File:LushCosmetics.svg | |
Public limited company | |
Industry | Personal care |
Founded | 1995 |
Founder | Mark and Mo Constantine, Liz Weir, Helen Ambrosen, Rowena Bird and Paul Greaves |
Headquarters | Poole, United Kingdom |
Products | Cosmetics |
Revenue | £282.5m in 2014 |
Website | lush.com |
Lush is a cosmetics retailer headquartered in Poole, Dorset, United Kingdom, founded by Mark Constantine, a trichologist and Liz Weir, a beauty therapist. They met in a hair and beauty salon in Poole, England. A few years later, they decided to branch out and start their own business selling natural hair and beauty products.
Contents
History
In the early 80s, Constantine read about Anita Roddick, who had just started The Body Shop. He called her and offered some of his products. She initially placed an order for £1,200 to start with, and from there Constantine and Weir developed products for The Body Shop and became the company's largest supplier for over a decade. It was at this point The Body Shop decided to buy their product formulas.
The Body Shop's purchase of their product formulas forbade Mark and Liz from opening another retail shop for five years, so they set up a mail order cosmetics company called Cosmetics-To-Go. It was a successful although complicated venture that ended up burning out. The company went into administration and sold to someone from Poole, who took the product formulas and the Cosmetics-To-Go name.
Mark and Liz, along with Mo Constantine, Helen Ambrosen, Rowena Bird and Paul Greaves from Cosmetics-To-Go, spent what money they had left on fresh fruits and vegetables at the market. In a shop in Poole, they hand made products upstairs that were being sold downstairs. They had previously been paying another company to come up with the fragrances for their products, but found out the perfumes weren't always pure, so Mark decided he would create the perfumes himself. A competition was launched for customers to give the company a new name. One customer suggested LUSH, which is defined as being fresh, green, and verdant.[citation needed]
Mark Constantine started mixing potions in his kitchen for Anita and Gordon Roddick and became a supplier of The Body Shop in the 1970s.[citation needed] Mark Constantine, a herbal trichologist, and Elizabeth Weir, had an interest in beauty therapy and thus, formed a company named Constantine & Weir.[1] They developed a number of recipes for bath and beauty products and were a major supplier to The Body Shop, until Roddick was consulted to take more products in house. The Body Shop then paid £11m for the rights of Constantine & Weir's recipes.[2][3][4]
In December 2010, Mark and Mo Constantine were awarded the OBE in the New Year's Honours list, for services to the beauty industry.[5]
Business structure
Lush is a privately owned company with a small number of shares available on an invitation basis only.[6] The company's growth is based mainly upon partnerships.
The company also owned the B Never Too Busy To Be Beautiful brand, which had outlets in Poole, Leeds, Covent Garden, and Oxford Street. Lush announced in 2009 that B would cease trading, saying "the company has NOT gone bust or bankrupt and there are no administrators involved, we are simply unable to make a profit. Lush will be absorbing the business in order to retain the assets."
Products
Lush produces soaps, shampoos, shower gels, lotions, moisturizers, scrubs, masks and other cosmetics for the face, hair, and body using vegetarian recipes. Solid shampoos as well as "Toothy Tabs" which are solid toothpaste tablets are also available for purchase online and in a retail store (Inventions: Patents DE 20314733, RU 2252011). Lush is also known for their "Bath Bombs" which are solid bars of sodium bicarbonate and citric acid. As of July 2012, Lush began selling their "Emotional Brilliance" makeup collection, which includes liquid lipsticks, liquid eyeliners, and cream shadows. Lush also launched their first mascara, Eyes right, under the "Emotional Brilliance" line.
Lush products are made in factories around the world including Poole, Dorset, Toronto, Canada, and Vancouver, Canada,[citation needed] Lush marks its trademark black tub products with stickers of the actual creators of the product being sold, a unique trademark stamped on their recyclable polypropylene plastic black pots. The company also offers customers a way to recycle used black pots by bringing empty ones back to the store for a free Fresh Face Mask for every five returned.[7] Most Lush products are to be stored at room temperature, with the exception of their Fresh Face Masks, which require refrigeration due to the absence of preservatives and the main ingredients being fruits and vegetables.[8] Stores do not typically sell products older than four or five months and most products have a shelf life of approximately 14 months, depending on the particular item.[9]
Often, the labels contain funny text, directions or signs.
Ingredients
Lush products are 100% vegetarian. They are 83% vegan and 60% preservative-free (though these numbers fluctuate, as the product range changes frequently) and often contain fruits and vegetables such as grapefruit juice, vanilla beans, avocado butter, rosemary oil, fresh papaya and coconut. However, some products contain lanolin, milk, eggs, honey, and beeswax. Parabens are used to preserve a number of the products.
Ethos and campaigning
Lush does not buy from companies that carry out, fund, or commission any animal testing.[10] They test their products on human volunteers before they are sold to the public.[11] Lush has also phased out its use of sodium palm kernelate, which is derived from trees in the natural habitat of orangutans. Since 2008, all Lush soaps have been made with palm-free soap base, and they have since removed all traces of palm oil from the products.[12]
Lush has created a product called 'Charity Pot', a hand and body lotion that ensures that 100% of all proceeds of these 'Charity Pots' go to charitable organizations that Lush supports. 'Charity Pots' support areas of environmental conservation, animal welfare, and human rights.[13]
Lush is a supporter of direct action, animal rights operations including Sea Shepherd, a group that works to protect whales, seals, and other aquatic animals.[14] Lush has been a supporter of antitax avoidance grouping UKuncut.
In 2007, Lush started openly supporting campaigning groups by sending a dozen cheques for £1000 each, including road protests groups such as Road Block and NoM1Widening, Hacan Clear Skies (anti-aviation group), and Dump the Dump (which is fighting against an incinerator).[15][16]
In 2011, Israel advocacy groups StandWithUs and United With Israel UK launched a campaign encouraging consumers to boycott Lush products on account of the company's decision to promote OneWorld's Freedom for Palestine initiative.[17][18]
Since 2013, Lush's 'Charity Pot' has included the campaign to release Guantanamo detainee Shaker Aamer to the U.K., who is presently only clear for release to Saudi Arabia.[19]
Maintaining its ethical roots, Lush Cosmetics donated £3.8m to charities in 2014.[20]
In 2014 Lush supported the first Hen Harrier Day, with all its UK stores prominently highlighting the illegal persecution of Hen Harriers on upland grouse moors.[21] The following year it launched Hen Harrier bath bombs to help fund satellite tagging of these raptors.[22]
In Summer 2015 Lush raised £275,000 ($425,000) from the worldwide sale of its "GayIsOK" soap, with funds going to support LBGTI campaigning groups.[23]
In 2014, a UK newspaper Mail criticised Lush and Body Shop for implying that some cosmetics on sale elsewhere in Britain were still tested on animals, despite an EU-wide ban coming into force in 2013 (for which Lush had campaigned) which made it illegal to sell toiletries and make-up in the EU which had been tested on animals anywhere in the world.[24]
The following year it was criticised for insensitivity when it stocked Lavender Hill Mob - a brand of incense inspired by the 2011 London Riots, featuring a graphic of a burning building. Lavender Hill itself had been targeted by looters and rioters, but Lush stated that it was "created to emphasise the importance of community".[25]
References
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- ↑ Business Lessons for the Entrepreneur from Lush, launchprivatelabel.com, 2012-10-04.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://www.lush.com/lush/franchise.html
- ↑ https://www.lush.co.uk/article/recycling-our-black-pots
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- ↑ http://www.lushusa.com/on/demandware.store/Sites-Lush-Site/en_US/Charities-Support
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandconsumer/11423309/Lush-defies-currency-turmoil-to-post-sweet-smelling-profits.html
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
- EngvarB from September 2013
- Use dmy dates from September 2013
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from December 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from September 2015
- Pages containing citation needed template with deprecated parameters
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Animal rights movement
- Companies based in Poole
- Cosmetics companies of the United Kingdom
- Retail companies of the United Kingdom