, a series that celebrates the brilliant Black entrepreneurs doing bits in the UK.
The children had to dress up as one of their favourite characters and I noticed that a young girl who was dressed as Goldielocks had no command of the stage.I wondered whether the costume was the reason for her lack of confidence and if it was her inability to relate to the synthetic, straight, blonde wig that was stopping her from being as bold as usual.
Parents have also spoken highly of our quality. One of my aims when staring Nubian Reines was to ensure products were high in quality yet reasonable in price.When I came up with the idea, I immediately knew the skin tones of the girls had to showcase the many skin tones of Black and mixed children. It was also important to me that their hair textures illustrated the natural hair textures of Black and mixed girls.
What do you say those who claim that Black Pound Day is ‘discriminatory’ towards non-Black business owners?
Nubians weren't Sub-Saharan African.
It sounds like she would love her African homeland.
Kids with butterflies, flowers, etc on their bags must be so ‘confused’. How they must fail to be indoctrinated about identify and racial politics of skin colour with a different animal or plant on their backpack. Identity only something to be proud of if you aren’t white - 😖☹️
The backpacks look like children?
Was starting the headline with 'black woman' necessary? I'm supposing she has a name?
Cool
Meh...in a racist society, mixed race women reign over black women in the black community - in terms of sexual attraction and life chances. It's dark and darker skinned black women who really need that kind of validation ffs.
It’s nice that you’ve started pointing out their race in the headlines, so I know to disregard the article
Cheap rubbish