Are lo-fi ad campaigns the next big thing?

Fenty Beauty’s clip-arty social media campaign may signal a change in direction for luxury advertising. It won’t suit every brand.
Image may contain Rihanna Adult Person Head and Face
Photo: Courtesy of Fenty Beauty (original photo by Tiziano Da Silva)

Sign up to receive the Vogue Business newsletter for the latest luxury news and insights, plus exclusive membership discounts.

Cosmetics marketing tends to follow a fairly rigid formula. In print, you’ll get a dewy-skinned model pouting softly at the camera; on video, a cinematic clip of Natalie Portman laughing in a wildflower meadow. The visual language is premium, sophisticated, aspirational — about as far as you can get from a clumsily edited, human-sized lip gloss holding a glass of wine.