Digital Salon Interview with author Angelique V. Nixon

On Thursday May 2nd, I have the honor of hosting the New York book launch of Saltwater Healing by Angelique V. Nixon.  This myth memoir and poetry collection is an intimate articulation of self, family herstories, and personal reflections. I am ecstatic to share this brief interview ( there were so many more questions I wanted to ask) where Angelique discusses the book and her creation process.  I could go on and on here but I’ll let you read Angelique’s words for yourself. If you’re your in NYC, come out and join us Thursday at Bluestockings Boookstore! You’ll want to get a copy of this amazing piece of literary artwork.  

***

Jess: What is a myth memoir and why did you choose this genre form to negotiate with/and present your story?

Angelique V. Nixon: I call my literary artwork “A Myth Memoir” because this describes the blending of stories, experiences, memories, dreams, and mystical elements of the narrative and poetry in the artwork. Also, I am working in the tradition of Black women writers who insist upon our need to create our own stories out of what we know and what we don’t know — because so much of our histories and herstories are unknown. I am particularly inspired by the great Black feminist poet and activist Audre Lorde’s biomythography Zami where she defies literary boundaries by creating a new genre using storytelling, dreams, myths, and histories/herstories to tell her story.

 

Jess: Did you make a deliberate decision to handcraft the memoir? Does the physical form of the book become an extension of the reckoning process for you as it pertains to healing? If so, how?

AVN: I started the art pieces in a creative writing workshop as an assignment to tell our story using a graphic novel style. And so in some ways it was deliberate, but it grew organically and in ways I didn’t envision when I started the project. The entire process was very tactile and physical – creating each of the 18 pages and transforming them into art pieces and then putting it all together for an art exhibit. And then creating the book was another part of this very tactile process. The first few pages started with an adult me telling stories and then the later pages transformed into a childhood persona re-telling and re-imagining my childhood through the land/seascape and my grandmother’s mythic voice. Some pages started with the stories, while others started with photographs and scraps of materials.

I went back and forth with inspiration from the materials (cotton, fabric, seeds, dried plants and seeds, straw plaits, and sand) and with the stories that emerged as I wrote and created each page – interplay between visual and text. I used Androsia fabric and plaited straw specifically because of how these materials are used in Bahamian cultural production and for tourism. This vision expanded as I worked with the fabric and straw as a reflection of the obvious to tell what is not so obvious – the hidden from view, the unspoken, the silenced. The creation process was an incredible healing journey and the pieces transformed each day I was at home in March 2012 to do the installation for Transforming Spaces in the Bahamas. I was fortunate to be home during Woman Tongue season – trees being ripe with pods and the beautiful sounds they make during our Bahamian spring time. This took my project to the healing and mythic space I had envisioned through the stories, and working with the woman tongue seeds and pods captivated my poet self.

And so the pieces grow from distance and longing in photographs of the first few pages to a more physical closeness with tactile offerings of the last pages and the frame of woman tongue pods and coconut tree branches. I ended the memoir with a kind of opening and circular movement that I hope pulls readers/viewers back into the piece to share in my vision of Saltwater Healing. The book grew out of my original idea for this project, which blossomed into a visual art piece. I see the book as an extension and movement of the piece that includes the myth memoir and several of my poems that brought me to this creative journey of self love and survival.

 

Jess: You write in your memoir: I rememory the stories of my birth with fire tongue. Can you talk more about the act of rememory- your act of rememory?

AVN: I am inspired by and work in the tradition of other women writers of color who insist upon our need to create and re-create our stories. We must do this because so many of our stories have been marginalized, lost, stolen, misnamed, undervalued, and invisible. The act of rememory for me is acknowledging that these memories are with us always through shared experiences, ancestors, and the land/sea/environment. And its using these memories to tell, create, recreate, transform, and make new stories.

 

Jess: Your writing,  in many ways, speaks of crossing boundaries be them emotional, familial, geographic, social, or sexual. I’m thinking here of the line from the poem ” I am, we are, silent no more” which reads : and the in/betweens trouble boundaries/these must be spoken. What does it mean for black women to cross these boundaries? How have you crossed boundaries in your own life?

AVN: Black women writers have long taken up this work of exploring and exploding boundaries because as Black feminists have argued since the 1960s, we exist within the boundaries, at the intersections, and therefore have unique insights into the commonalities of oppression – and we have a right to theorize, study, explain, and write about our own experiences. The writings of Black women like Audre Lorde, Sylvia Wynter, June Jordan, Angela Davis, Erna Brodber, M. Nourbese Philip, Alice Walker, Jacqui Alexander, Michelle Cliff, and Dionne Brand, among others, have blessed me with tools, language, and inspiration to understand and explicitly trouble boundaries. I am a Black mixed-race queer migrant woman with poor working class roots, living abroad yet deeply tied to home and the Caribbean as homeplace. And so I feel as if I exist in the “in-between” all the time.

I rarely fit easily into any one particular space and so I have had to cross boundaries, but I do so with consciousness of my gender, race, color, class, sexuality, nationality, histories/herstories, etc. I am also keenly aware of where I come from and the politics of mobility and access. So I have had to stay grounded, and I keep my work and myself honest and true to my politics and my communities. As a person of African descent and a person of color, I feel deeply a sense of responsibility to my ancestors and the shared oppression marginalized peoples have experienced and continue to experience. Yet I am female, same-sex loving, light-skinned, immigrant, raised in poverty, etc. with my own stories but these are connected. And so the personal stories I share in my work reflect these larger stories that must be told.

 

Jess: In recent years, we’ve seen more black women writers being published by major houses. In your opinion, is this indicative of a wider climate change about the importance of black women’s stories?

AVN: There has certainly been an impressive and growing body of Black women writers across the diaspora getting published by major publishing houses. And perhaps this does indicate that Black women’s stories are finally getting more attention. But I think there is still so much work we have to do. Our stories and our lives continue to be either hypervisible or invisible. I believe that Blackness continues to be denigrated and devalued, and we must constantly be wary of how our bodies and our stories are used – in mass media especially.

 

Jess: On the opposite end of the spectrum, I personally have been invigorated by the number of black women story tellers using small presses and even self publishing their novels, memoirs, poetry collections etc. Why did you choose to publish via a small press?

AVN: I chose to publish with Poinciana Paper Press because I believe in small independent publishing, and I want to support local businesses in the Caribbean. Also for me, its an honor to be published, recognized, and supported by a local Bahamian press because my work is about home – and no matter how long I have lived away – The Bahamas is always my home.

 

Jess: How does your literary artwork inform your academic and activist work?

AVN: I would have to say that my poetry has long inspired me to stay rooted in community in  my academic work, and that my activist work has been fed by and feeds my poetry. The visual and mixed media art is a new creative exploration for me over the last year, and its been a welcome and needed escape from the rigidity of academic work. My creative work is vital to my very existence and so is my community work.

 

Jess: How can Zora and our readers continue to support you?

AVN: Please come out the New York launch and reading of Saltwater Healing on Thursday, May 2nd at Bluestockings at 7pm! And if you want to know more about my work, check out my blog conscious vibration, which is part archive of my writing life and part monthly musings/updates about what I’m working on at that particular time. Follow my blog at consciousvibration.blogspot.com. Follow me on instagram at “sistellablack.”

***

Angelique V. Nixon is a Caribbean writer, scholar, teacher, community worker, artist, and poet – born and raised in The Bahamas. She earned her Ph.D. in English specializing in Caribbean literature and culture at the University of Florida. She teaches in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania. Her work as a scholar and poet has been published widely in academic and literary journals, namely Anthurium, Black Renaissance Noire, Journal of Caribbean Literatures, MaComere, small axe salon, tongues of the ocean, and WomanSpeak. Angelique is deeply invested in grassroots activism and is involved with a number of community-based organizations, including Ayiti Resurrect, Caribbean IRN, and Critical Resistance, among others. She works through her writing and activism to disrupt silences, challenge systems of oppression, and carve spaces for resistance and desire.

Yari Yari Ntoaso Digital Salon Series: Evelyne Trouillot

Zora is happy to bring you another writer in our salon series! This time we feature Hatian writer Evelyne Trouillot.  Please consider making a financial contribution in support of these women storytellers. Visit www.indiegogo/owwa to give.  

******

Zora: I write because…

ET: I fulfill a need when I write.  Writing allows me to fully be myself.  It is the best way for me to question life, to try to find answers, to react against what I find unbearable and try to make sense of what I see around me. It is a process that is at the same time painful, beautiful and powerful.  It takes a lot from me but I feel so much better when I feel I have achieved what I wanted…until the next book.

Zora:  If you were only allowed to own one piece of literature by a single author (e.g novel, short story collection, memoir, poetry collection), what work would you choose and why?

ET: It is very difficult to choose one single piece. I read every day and am still discovering new authors, new books that enchant me. They come join the old ones to enrich my life, the corpus of books and images that inhabit my imagination. But since I have to choose one book I will go back to The Little Prince, the classic book by Antoine de St Exupéry. Because it delves in such an original way to the basic human dilemma: all relationships come with risks, all human sentiments require some type of commitment. What constitutes our humanity comes with the risks of deception, of hurt, but it is worth it and without these sentiments life is worthless. The beauty of The Little Prince is that St Exupéry manages beautifully to convey these ideas to readers of all ages.

Zora:  Has the emergence of new media or electronic forms of outreach (e.g., blogging, social media) changed how you write or interact with readers?

No, not really. I think writing remains a solitary act, a way to travel inside oneself. What are new are the opportunities to share what we write with many more people depending on the medium that we choose. The act of writing whether one uses a keyboard, a pencil or a pen will involve the same intimate connection between thoughts, ideas and words. Plus, I have to admit I am not big on social media.

 Zora: What is your proudest artistic moment thus far?

ET: My happiest moments occur when readers sense what I wanted to convey in a way that goes beyond what I imagine and makes me discover something new about my writing. The power of art, of literature is that it does not belong to any individual; it becomes part of the reader’s own world. I love this moment when I meet a reader and I feel that we share the same world because of one of my books.

Zora: What should people know about women writers in and of the African Diaspora?

ET: When I read other women writers of African descent whether they live in Africa or out of Africa, I feel the power of history. Literature, poetry and art in general can transcend all prejudice, horrors of the past, woes of the present and transform them in something beautifully powerful. I think many women writers of African descent achieve that.

Zora: Why should people support this year’s Yari Yari Ntoaso indiegogo campaign?

ET: Promoting world literature is one of the best ways to work towards a world where people are more respectful and tolerant of each other. Also, Yari Yari gives the opportunity to women writers, artists and scholars who have a lot in common, but come from different contexts to share their views, and to reflect on their works. It will ultimately allow more creativity and diversity in the world.

Zora: How can Zora Magazine and our readers learn more about you and your work?

ET: As a Haitian writer living and working in Haiti, I write in our two official languages, Creole and French. Some of my work is translated into English, Spanish, German and Italian. I will recommend the ilenile site where readers will find samples of my writing and information about my work and my interview with Edwidge Danticat on Bomb magazine where I share with Edwidge my views about writing and living in Haiti among other things.

You can also visit Repeating Islands and Words Without Borders to continue engaging with Evelyne!

 

** Born in Port-au-Prince, Haïti, Évelyne Trouillot lives and works there as a French Professor at the State Universtiy. She published her first book of short stories in 1996. In 2004, Évelyne Trouillot received the award: Prix de la romancière francophone du Club Soroptimist de Grenoble for her first novel Rosalie l’infâme. In 2005, her first piece for the theater Le bleu de l’île received the Beaumarchais award from ETC Caraïbes. Évelyne Trouillot has published two books of poetry: Sans parapluie de retour in 2001, and Plidetwal in Creole in 2005. Her poetry has been translated in Spanish and English and published in numerous magazines in France, Canada, Mexico and Cuba. Her latest novel La mémoire aux abois published in France, Éditions Hoëbeke, in May 2010 received the prestigious award Le prix Carbet de la Caraïbe et du Tout-Monde in December 2010. It has been translated into Spanish by La Casa de las Americas, Cuba.**

 

Zora is proud to support Yari Yari Ntoaso 2013

“No black woman writer in this culture can write “too much”. Indeed, no woman writer can write “too much”…No woman has ever written enough.”- bell hooks, remembered rapture: the writer at work

On May 16th, hundreds of black women writers, from across the diaspora, will meet in Accra, Ghana for the Yari Yari Ntoaso Writer’s Conference sponsored by the Organization of Women Writers of Africa. Yari Yari Ntoaso, the 3rd installation in a series of symposiums that began in 1997, will bring together generations of black women storytellers committed to preserving and sharing the beauty of our writings.

Founded in 1991 by the late Jayne Cortez and Ama Ata Aidoo, OWWA is dedicated to creating spaces where black women authors and their writings can be celebrated in a circle of sisterhood. This year OWWA has launched an indiegogo campaign to help cover the travel expenses for participating writers and Zora is proud to stand alongside these phenomenal women in support.

As such, we’ll be hosting a digital salon featuring some of the women slated to speak in Accra this May. We’ll kick off this interview series tomorrow with poet Camille Dungy. We hope that their voices, stories, and work will inspire you to support the campaign and continue along your own literary journey!

To learn more about OWWA and the fundraiser visit www.indiegogo/owwa. AND HURRY! The campaign expires on March 15th: No donation is too small or unimportant!

British Duo Native Sun Warms Listeners with Diasporic Energy

Discovering new music is such an invigorating process for me because I am able to encounter new stories of culture and language and growth. It feels good to sing along with an artist who knows how to speak to my soul in a new way. Such was the case when I discovered British Duo Native Sun who blend afro beat melodies with Hip Hop lyricism in order to charm and inspire.

When you listen to Native Sun, you are invited into diaspora. Group members, Mohammed Yahya and Sarina Leah are both musicians committed to not only quality music but edifying words through a message of peace. Their new album, Indigenous Soundwaves, is a testament to the fact that brothers and sisters around the world are speaking truth to power in the most creative of ways. Zora had the pleasure to chat with the duo as they prepared for their first Chicago performance. Effortlessly cool, the group dropped their thoughts on the recording process, listener support, and spirituality.

Zora: Thanks for speaking with us today! For those of us new to your music, can you talk about how you two connected? How did Native Sun come about?

Sarina: Myself and Mohammed met about ten or eleven years ago. My best friend is Mohammed’s wife and a member of the group Poetic Pilgrimage so we moved in the same circles and there were various events that Poetic Pilgrimage and Mohammed Yahya would create and one event was called Rebel Music. Because we were like a little family we ended up eventually working together after Mohammed kept pushing me to do a track with him. One track turned into two then three and we decided to be a group and build.

Zora: Has music always been something you knew you wanted to do?

Mohammed: For me, music came at such a young age. I was born in Mozambique and I fled to Portugal where I lived for 10 years and music played a big role because I didn’t have literature that would teach me about my country. I was taught through music so as soon as I was able to read and write, I started writing poetry. I was really, really young and when Hip Hop came to Portugal I thought “Oh my God, this is amazing. This is it.”

Sarina: I used to sing all the time. Back in my era there were tapes [laughs], not CD’s and so I would record alot of radio music like TLC, SWV, and Brandy. I would record the songs,rewind, and then try to remember how to sing it just like the artist.I spent alot of time writing the wrong lyrics [laughs] thinking I was singing the right thing. But it was cool because I learned to write and also sing that way.

Zora: As I listened to your music, I was immediately struck by an energy of an artform that is dedicated to peace and cultural dialogue. Why is it important for these themes to resonate in your music?

Mohammed: I think because it is such a universal message. Me and Sarina both have different spiritual paths in our lives but ultimately we’re trying to project that and as we look around us it’s obvious that the world needs more peace, love, understanding and cultural dialogue because ultimately we have to live with each other regardless of what paths or backgrounds we are coming from.

Sarina: I also think that the things that we write empower our own lives and vice versa. I’ve been a vegan for a year and being conscious of what I eat and what I choose to do empowers our music as well. There is a give and take element that is inspiring.

Zora: Your new project, Indigenous Soundwaves is dope! My favorite track is Gallery of Dreams. What was the recording process like? How do you feel now that the album is complete?

Mohammed: You know, it’s interesting because Gallery of Dreams was actually the first song that we recorded and as a rapper I’m used to writing really quickly, going to the studio and then recording but that song took months to do because we would record it in parts. Alot of our songs start off with us discussing different subjects and during that particular conversation Sarina was talking about children and the song grew from there. It’s a very emotional process.

Sarina: It’s very touching. You know what’s really deep as well? We thought of the title but we didn’t realize that it was G.O.D. Gallery of Dreams. That was such a spiritual thing. Usually, as a vocalist you are given a track and you put your vocals around the track but on this song I sang the melody and then Samantha, who plays the keys on the track, imitated my voice with the keys and it became a deep involvement.

Mohammed: And songs like that, we don’t even believe come from us. They comes through us.

Zora: What artists are you listening to currently?

Mohammed: I listen to people like Ian Kamau from Canada. I also listen to alot of West African Music from countries like Mali, Senegal.

Sarina: I’m really inspired by European Electro music. Little Dragon.And of course soul music is embedded in me as well, Erykah Badu, Jill Scott.

Zora: How can Zora and our readers continue to support you?

Mohammed: Keep up todate with us through our twitter and facebook but most importantly share the music!

Be sure to stay in touch with Native Sun via twitter at @nativesunmuzik or find them on facebook at Native Sun. You can also support the dynamic duo by picking up the digital copy of their soul stirring album Indigenous Soundwaves

It’s good stuff. I promise!

Beauty Maven: Interview with House of Mikko founder Kimberly Dillon

Kimberly Dillon is on a mission to help women celebrate their beauty and discover great new products. She is the founder and CEO of House of Mikko, a beauty recommendation engine for women. The company just launched I Love Your Hair, a mobile app to help women share product tips, get inspired, and discover styles.

Dillon spoke with Zora about diving into entrepreneurship, staying true to herself, and learning to focus on her strengths as a leader.

Why entrepreneurship? What prompted you to start House of Mikko?

I’ve had a lot of jobs after school and I got to a point where I knew what I wanted to do and what my strenghts were. It’s more challenging when you don’t really know what you want to do or haven’t found what you’re good at because you don’t see opportunities in the same way. Starting House of Mikko really came out of the fact that I was working at a beauty company and I knew it was really hard to market to women of color and women in general. It was a problem of my industry and I knew I had the skill set to address it.

When did you really decide you were going to go out on your own?

I started the beginning of the company while I was still in business school in 2010 but I didnt leave my full time job till September of last year.

Once you decided you were going to start House of Mikko, what were your next steps? What planning process did you go through?

I will say I had two distint processes. I wrote the business plan when I was in school so there was a lot of structure. Two months after graduation, I joined a startup accelerator at women 2.0. Incubators, accelerators and programs are a great way to help you identify and shape the foundations of your business. I’ve never really felt like I didn’t know what to do because I’ve had two programs that guided me through the process.

How did you think through the process of finding partners? When you were in business school, did you have partners that you knew you wanted to work with or did that came later?

I’ve had team the whole time but they’ve been different teams. Usually the best teams have worked with each other before so if you’re still in school, maintain those relationships. In early jobs, stay in touch with people. Even if they haven’t worked with me, it’s my network that has referred me to other people. Your network is incredibly important both in forming your team and in forming your advisers.

One thing that can be a stumbling block for women who want to be entrepreneurs, and for some men as well, is the lack of a technical background. What did you study and how did you go about filling any technical gaps?

It’s an ongoing struggle. In lieu of technical resources you have a higher burn rate because you have to pay someone. That becomes tricky becuase it’s not just paying someone, you have to pay the right people and that in itself is a bigger problem that the money For us, we did a lot of things to make that process as smooth as possible. One, we had technical advisors who double checked all of our work. Secondly, we wireframed and had a really strong vision. The idea itself is worth very little, it’s really how you are going to execute this and the look and feel of your product. And look and feel is something that most people who are not technical can approach. You really need to have a point of view in lieu of a technical co-founder and a ton of documentation because your engineer is a hired gun, he’s not really paid to see your vision.

That’s a great tip. Has your vision changed since you wrote that initial business plan? changed? Have there been any major changes as you’ve built the product and talked to users?

Several, like a thousand. We started as a beauty supply store then we became a recommendation engine which is how most people think of House of Mikko now, as a personalized beauty service. We’ve actually pivoted and are launchiing our first really commericial ready product which is called I Love Your Hair. It’s a mobile app that allows women to take picutres of their hair and tag what products they used or where they got it done and really connect with other women. It’s like Foodspotting for hair or twitter for hair.

Where did the original name come from for House of Mikko?

Mikko is the name of e a friend of mine which roughly means pretty girl in Japanese so we modified it. We went in that direction because beauty sites often tell you what you’re doing wrong and who’s prettier than you. For example, a lot of beauty magazines give advice to look like Beyonce who is gorgerous in her own right but many of us aren’t going to look like her. We wanted to take the approach that you’re already pretty and beautiful and you should feel that way. Our brand is about improving ourselves inside and out.

Your blog posts share the ups and downs of entrepreneurship. What would you say has been the biggest challenge of the past year?

I think the biggest challenge has been staying true to myself. I went through a period where I was doing things in a particular way. I thought, I need a tecnical co-founder before I can more forward, I need this money before I can do X, Y, and Z, I need this adviser before this can happen, I need to go to a networking event every night because that’s how this person did it.

I was copying what other people did and wasn’t really focusing on my own strengths and my own personality. I’m not one to go to a networking even every night. I didn’t go to Stanford, I do not have an engineering degree, I am not a white guy. I was focusing on all the things I was not instead of things that I am.

And I think the turnaround was that I decide that I’m just going to do this my way and be comfortable with that. It’s really playing to your strenghts versus focusing on your weaknesses because there’s going to be a lot of weaknesses but I have one or two really awesome strengths.

What are those strengths?

I really understand women but more broadly I understand people. I love marketing. I fundamentally love marketing and I think technology needs to move that way. There’s 10,000 developers that can make the next Angry Birds but that’s not particularly interesting for the future of the internet. Internet products in the future really have to understand consumer behavior to really win.

In addition to Founder Labs, which other ways have you found support?

I’ve found informal support and I also have a contrarian view to what we just discussed. Informally, I’m friends with a lot of people in the Black Founders group. We have a regular informal happy hour and it’s good to see people and get their updates. My contrarian viewpoint is that some of the most helpful people have not been women or people of color. It’s about judging people for who they are. Some of our biggest cheerleaders probably have very little idea of beauty but have a pretty strong investment in us as people. On some level there is a need to connect and promote women and people of color. On another level, there are a lot of people who are just interested in you as individual so you can’t just segregate yourself entirely because you’ll be surprised by a lot of unlikely candidates that will help you along the way.

You moved to San Francisco to launch your business. What are your feelings about being in the nexus of entrepreneurship?

I’m here for a specific reason. Most of my friends here also have startups so there’s the solidarity. There are people out there who do not care about every new product or the next photo-geo-local-social app. And sometimes its ridiculous to be in the valley where people are building social apps for dogs, but it’s also good to be around people who are as passionate as you are about specific industry.

You’re building a product but you’re also building a company. What have you larned about yourself as a leader in this process?

You have to trust yourself as a leader. One of the things I’ve found is that I’m often very apologietic for correcting people. But I’ve realized that a lot of people do want direction and that it’s your job to be the vision holder. No one is going to fight for it more than you are so it’s ok to seem a little pushy and seem a little aggressive. At [my old job] P&G, we used something called “having the D” which means having the decision so before you went into any meeting, you knew who had the D and there was no confusion. There’s something about having the D that’s powerful because you do need to make decisions and it’s ok to make the wrong decision. Sometimes it’s about just making a decision and not wallowing in wait and see mode because that puts you in a reacitonary place instead of a proactive place.

Is there anything you’ve learned about women and beauty and this industry that has surprised you?

One of the things I find interesting is that women identify themselves in two spectrums when in reality most of us are in the middle. When we pitch to women of all varieties, women instantly process themselves as either ‘I love makeup’ or more commonly’ I’m not wearing any makeup right now and I’m really not into that.’ It’s interesting that a lot of people say they’re not into beauty but I would argue that they are. Beauty is shampoo, deodorant, mascara, lip gloss. There are very few women who wash their face and go, or don’t put something on their hair with intention. People don’t want to perceived as using a lot of products but in reality grooming is part of our normal day-to-day process.

What are your favorite products? What do you love to use?

I also put myself in that category of not using a lot of beauty products but I own a lot so I’m not going to even lie about that. I am really into services. I like to get my eyebrows threaded and nails done. I recently just got into fake eyelashes . I don’t really wear a lot of beauty products but I will say it would be hard to find me without eyeliner or mascara on a pretty daily basis. I’m also very dark complexioned so I love weraing lipstick that a lot of people that aren’t my complexion cannot. I can wear a red lip pretty much on every occasion.

What other startups or products excite you right now?

I am starting to find what my new social network is to be honest and I’m exploring whether I like to use Instagram in that way or if I like using Path. My facebook has become slightly overwhelming in the sense that it’s so many people and I censor myself a lot more on now. I’m exploring Path where it’s literally my closest friends. I’m really interested in those types of more intimate social network that allow me to connect my true friends. There a lot in the space and I keep playing with them but one hasn’t really emerged yet.

What advice would you have for other young women, in particular black women or women of color, who want to be entrepreneurs?

For black entrepreneurs, I will say think really big. Especially if you’re thinking entrepreneurship in a way that you want to get investor morney. You need to be in a really big market to get someone else’s money so that means a billion dollar market. Thinking small will not get you money. Especially as a woman of color when you may already have things against you, you don’t want to do a version of something that’s really common. Find a unique space in a big market that’s interesting.

Download the I Love Your Hair App and follow House of Mikko on twitter.

Dressing for Success – 5 Essentials for Every Young Woman’s Wardrobe

Dress for the life you want to live, not the life you’re currently living. We’ve all heard that phrase several times but what does it truly mean? It can be a quite confusing statement and come with many misconceptions. For example, a college student might think: ”Why can I not wear Hollister every day? There is no need for me to be in a suit when I am sitting in my Econ 201 class on a Thursday evening.” Or the corporate warrior woman who has no desire to climb the ladder may loathe the business professional attire required of a 9 to 5, Monday through Friday position. Here is where the problem lies in both situations: dressing for where you are in your life leaves you tugging at the world in which you’re trying to live instead of focusing on where you want to be.

I am a 26 year old “fashionprenuer” and I should dress as such. It can be really hard for people to transition their wardrobe from college bohemian chic to classic & polished professional with a flip of the switch. That’s where having 5 key wardrobes staples helps. You never know who you’ll bump into when grocery shopping or studying at Starbucks. I met the Director of Public Relations for Neiman Marcus while at Starbucks crunching store numbers. She complimented me on my Prada wedges and I raved about her Givenchy Tote. Cards were exchanged and a friendship was forged. Now let’s build you a Dress For Success Wardrobe that can be used at any age and any time frame in your life.

1. Classic Trench
A Classic well cut trench coat can last for seasons and be used during anytime of the year. Invest in one that is tailored to your body. For cost-conscious consumer Michael Kors makes a great single breast trench. Higher-end well crafted Burberry is an excellent investment.

2. Classic Black Pump
A classic crafted 4” black pump can take you from day to night with no issues. Invest in a great pump that can last more than a couple wears. Also take it to a shoe repair and get the soles redone for longer wear. Nine West makes a great pump for an astounding price. If you’re willing to splurge, Serio Rossi is will be a great return on your investment.

3. Little Black Dress
The little black dress became a staple in the American women’s closet the day Audery Haprner made it so with Breakfast At Tiffany’s. A LBD can take you from interviews, weddings, funerals, lunch dates to many more occasions. As with the trench, find one that fits you and your body style. Victoria Beckham makes great dresses that embraces all body styles.

4. Tote
Your purse can speak for you without your even knowing. It can say she makes power moves or she throws everything in there and doesn’t care what anyone thinks. A tote that shows no logos and has little flashy hardward is a win. You can look professional without stating how much money you have. Marc by Marc Jacobs makes several cute purses with a wide variety of price points.

5. Blazer
Your wardrobe is not complete without a great blazer. I suggest purchasing a black or Grey blazer. They can be paired with several things in your closet. This helps you get multiple wears out of different outfits and styles. Ralph Lauren makes a fabulous blazer.

If you already own any of these pieces you can switch it up for other items to build your wardrobe. Shopping your closet is essential for staying within monthly budgets along with keeping track of what you already own. Furthermore, remember you don’t have to shop steep department stores. Browses your local TJ Maxx’s or consignment shops to spend a fraction of the cost.

What do you think? What are the “must haves” in your professional wear closet?