Showing posts with label Suave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suave. Show all posts

Saturday, August 2, 2025

521. HELENE CURTIS SUAVE presents: "The Creation Series" 1961

“POUFF PARISIENNE” by Panching Servando of Ben Farrales Glamour House. The August creation puts a twist on the French pouff by flattening the hair on the sides and back exposing the ears. The model is Ines Villareal-Regala.

One of the earliest haircare brands to forge a strategic alliance with beauty institutions and the leading hairdressers in the country was HELENE CURTIS, In the early 1960s the company began to build on the success of its SUAVE brand, introducing shampoos, creme rinses, and wave sets. To promote it, SUAVE was promoted by beauty salon operators and the country’s leading hairstylists, in tie-up ads that bannered new hairstyles and the latest coiffure craze for them month, through a “creation series” launched in 1961 through 1962. The following 2-color ads which featured name models, were part of the series that ran in women’s magazines nationwide.

“PAPILLON” by Beny Baluyot of Beny’s Beauty Salon. A new creation for February that flaunts soft-looking hair for a chic, casual style that women will love.

“BOB PARISIENNE” by the Kayumanggi Styling Group, This shimmering hairstyle creation for December with lovely highlights features model Mrs. Caroline Manning. 

“THE BELL” by Moises Sia of Del Val’s Beauty Salon. Classically-designed  hair highlighted by sparkling gleams created by Suave for a radiant effect, without looking oily.

SUAVE, introduced in 1937 by Helene Curtis, is one of the most successful and enduring brand of the company and is still available to this day. Now with Unilever, SUAVE as a brand represents more than 100 products including shampoo, lotions, soaps and deodorant, used in United States, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and Canada.

SOURCES:

Suave (the brand), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suave_(brand)

Helene Curtis Industries Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helene_Curtis_Industries,_Inc.


Sunday, May 22, 2022

373. Helene Curtis SUAVE Hairdressing Crème and Lotion, Print Ads 1960-1969

SUAVE Print Ad, 1969, featuring Terry Aldeguer of the Aldeguer Sisters

Helene Curtis was a company formed from National Industries, which had originally produced personal care products, but which had to shift to making products for the war efforts. After World War II, National Industries resumed making personal care products and was renamed Helene Curtis, after the first names of partner Louis Stein's wife and son. 
The first products to come out from the Helene Curtis plant was SUAVE Hairdressing, in Crème and Lotion, which was launched for general retail sale, and proved to be a sales success. It went on to create more revolutionary products like hairsprays, with the brand name, Spraynet, spray-on deodorant Stopette, and a dandruff shampoo called Enden. 

Hairdresser Nomer Pabilonia for SUAVE. Model: Conchitina Sevilla 

But in the 1960s, Helene Curtis would eventually go back to build on the success of its SUAVE brand, introducing shampoos, creme rinses, and wave sets. As early as the 1960, Helene Curtis SUAVE was marketed in the Philippines, and was actively pushed with regular advertising campaigns. 

The earliest examples show SUAVE print ads featuring well-known fashion icons modeling the latest styles (“The Bob”, “The Bell”) created by leading hairdressers of the day, like Nomer Pabilonia and Moises Sia, who readily endorsed the product. 

Hairdresser Moises Sia for SUAVE, 1960 Print Ad

SUAVE had a great run in the Philippines and in the 1980s, it was repackaged in cost-efficient plastic with caps, as hair control products became more popular. Today, the SUAVE brand is owned by Unilever, and has expanded to include hair grooming essentials for men and women, like gels, shampoos, mousse, aerosol anti-frizz and other hair-control products.