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Author: Admin | 2025-04-27
Chanel’s Rouge Noir has quite rightly become one of the most iconic shades of all time. Debuted at Paris Fashion Week in the mid '90s as a striking Le Vernis nail enamel, the hue is still one of the most coveted—and questionably duped—color in both fashion and beauty history. But while the legendary status of Rouge Noir is unwavering, the origin of the red-black is surrounded by urban myth. How did this popular shade come into fruition? Scroll down for everything you’ve ever wanted to know about the cult classic color. It’s true that the Le Vernis Rouge Noir was first debuted at the A/W '94 Chanel show, but the relationship between the hue and the label dates back even further. In an article titled "Seeing the Mode in Color," which appeared in the May 1926 issue of Vogue, Mademoiselle Chanel’s preference for the shade is duly noted. Describing the color before it was given its iconic name, the article reads: “Black and white are joined by red, a garnet shade, like the heart of a black cherry, which Chanel uses frequently and which is often called ‘red-black.’” Little did anyone know, this red-black hue was going to change the history of our nails, past and present. Lipnitzki / Roger Viollet / Getty Images It’s the shade that’s sparked a thousand imitations (and we truly mean that), so it might be surprising that the color was actually born out of a pre-Chanel show accident. Just two days prior to the A/W '94 collection debut in Paris, makeup artist Heidi Morawetz decided to formulate a shade based on a black-and-white photo she had seen in a magazine. Using her kitchen table as a makeshift lab, she and Dominique Moncourtois—Chanel's director of makeup creation at the time—mixed black and red pigments in a panic. Ultimately, the hand-mixed formula they created was the rudimentary version of Le Vernis Rouge Noir, with the color then perfected in a lab before being used by the manicurist backstage. Journalists saw the striking new color on the runway and, needless to say, the crowd went wild. Following
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