News — little black girls

Glamour & Beauty

Posted by Precious Jewel on

Glamour & Beauty
Habits for the little beauties in your life!

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The Spirit of Jealousy and How to Navigate It

Posted by Precious Jewel on

The Spirit of Jealousy and How to Navigate It

If you are a woman who is strategic, smart, beautiful, likable, and/or well put together, you may experience jealousy from multiple groups of people. Family members, associates, coworkers, superiors, and even strangers are amongst the group. Learning how to navigate jealously and even sabotage is a skill worth learning.  Here are ways feminine, classy women become perceived (emphasis on perceived) threats: Continue reading for Blog Access and Private Society Members. 

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From Girlhood to Womanhood

Posted by Precious Jewel on

From Girlhood to Womanhood

These experiences were lovely and an important aspect of girlhood for me, so I would like to share a list I believe every.... Continue reading for Private Members Only. 

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Lessons I Learned As A Debutant

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Lessons I Learned As A Debutant

"Black American debutante balls can be traced back to 1778 in New York, when the first debutante was recorded by a newspaper, with the first official ball occurring in 1895 in New Orleans" (New York Times). Black debutante balls present young girls from Black communities to society. Young ladies are encouraged to exemplify good manners, grooming, and social etiquette. But unlike other debutante balls, whose primary goal is to prepare and present young women for marriage, Black debutante balls prepare debutantes for the world outside of the protection of their social circles and communities. Within Black communities, the spotlight is...

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Charm, Beauty, and Grace

Posted by Precious Jewel on

Charm, Beauty, and Grace

In 1948 Ophelia DeVore-Mitchell, former model, agent, charm-school director and newspaper publisher, opened the first black charm school to teach African-American women etiquette, self-preservation and confidence.  Long before the phrase “Black is beautiful” gained currency in the 1960s, Mrs. DeVore-Mitchell was preaching that ethos by example. In New York in the 1940s — an age when modeling schools, and modeling jobs, were overwhelmingly closed to African Americans — Ophelia helped start the Grace del Marco Modeling Agency and later founded the Ophelia DeVore School of Self-Development and Modeling. As a charm-school director, Mrs. DeVore-Mitchell taught dress, diction and deportment to thousands of students,...

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