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  • Studio Rental (3hr)

    STUDIO RULES **Rental time begins promptly at the prescribed starting time and ends promptly at the prescribed ending time, regardless if renter and/or renter’s party is late*** ***Rental time includes setup, tear down and cleaning. The studio must be cleaned and vacated by the scheduled end time and no later, please consider this when booking your rental*** $50 minimum cleaning fee required if/for excessively dirty studio. STUDIO GUIDELINES No smoking is allowed in the studio. Music is to be kept at reasonable levels during the weekdays. No pets allowed without prior consent of a company representative All small and/or hard to clean material (confetti, hair cutting, feathers, food products, body paint, etc.) require approval from company representative. $50 minimum cleaning fee required, additional charges my apply depending on studio condition at wrap. STUDIO EQUIPMENT Basic Studio lighting is provided at no additional cost. Renter is responsible for studio lighting setup and tear down. All pre-installed paper backdrops (black, white) are free with rentals. Special order backdrop colors can be requested and installed for $99 (7 day notice required) Cancellation Policy Cancellations Must Be Recorded at least 48 hours prior to reservation. All cancellations will ocurr a $50 fee.

  • Studio Rental

    Service Description STUDIO RULES **Rental time begins promptly at the prescribed starting time and ends promptly at the prescribed ending time, regardless if renter and/or renter’s party is late*** ***Rental time includes setup, tear down and cleaning. The studio must be cleaned and vacated by the scheduled end time and no later, please consider this when booking your rental*** $50 minimum cleaning fee required if/for excessively dirty studio. STUDIO GUIDELINES No smoking is allowed in the studio. Music is to be kept at reasonable levels during the weekdays. No pets allowed without prior consent of a company representative All small and/or hard to clean material (confetti, hair cutting, feathers, food products, body paint, etc.) require approval from company representative. $50 minimum cleaning fee required, additional charges my apply depending on studio condition at wrap. STUDIO EQUIPMENT Basic Studio lighting is provided at no additional cost. Renter is responsible for studio lighting setup and tear down. All pre-installed paper backdrops (black, white) are free with rentals. Special order backdrop colors can be requested and installed for $99 (7 day notice required) Cancellation Policy Cancellations Must Be Recorded at least 48 hours prior to reservation. All cancellations will ocurr a $50 fee.

  • Custom Event Space Inquiry (3+Hours min)

    Final Price will be decided after custom event inquiry is sent. Up to 8 hours, including set up and break down time. Please let us know what type of event you want to host. Outside food is permitted. No smoking inside space. Our event space is ideal for intimate events up to (40 people.) Cancellation Policy Cancellations Must Be Recorded at least 48 hours prior to reservation. All cancellations will ocurr a $50 fee.

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Blog Posts (743)

  • From Engineering to Influence: How Crystal Nicole Turned Her Natural Hair Journey Into a Movement

    In an industry where beauty trends often move faster than authenticity, Crystal Nicole built her platform by doing something deceptively simple: telling the truth about her journey. Known to many online as CurlieCrys , the beauty, lifestyle, travel, and fashion creator has grown a loyal audience of over one million followers across platforms. Her content rooted in natural haircare, skincare, and serene home aesthetics blends technical precision with emotional storytelling. But Crystal’s path into digital influence wasn’t typical. Words by Angel Neal, @angel_stylistbehavior Photo credit : @newyorkmemories Before brand partnerships with names like Charlotte Tilbury, Olay, SheaMoisture, Youth to the People, Aveeno, and Kiehl’s, she was a civil engineer. And for a long time, content creation was simply a passion project. “I didn’t realize this could become my career until after I graduated,” Crystal tells Disrupshion Magazine . “While I was in college, creating content was just something I did for fun. I liked educating women and sharing what I was learning about my hair. I never thought it would become something bigger.” After graduating from the University of New Orleans, Crystal accepted her first engineering role in Austin, Texas. Living on her own for the first time gave her the freedom to build a creative routine even if it meant working two full-time schedules. “I was working a nine-to-five and then coming home to film, edit, and send content to brands sometimes until two in the morning,” she says. “I was posting every single day while still working my engineering job.” The more time she invested in her platform, the more opportunities followed. Partnerships began increasing and so did her income. “When I started making two to three times more from content than I was making as an engineer, I thought I had calculated something wrong,” she laughs. “But it was consistent. That’s when I realized this might actually be sustainable.” Still, walking away from a stable engineering career required more than excitement. It required strategy. Crystal spent months tracking income and evaluating stability before making the leap in 2017. “Faith without works is dead,” she says. “I prayed about the decision, but I also planned. I calculated my income for months to see if it was consistent enough to support me. Leaving a stable job is scary, so you have to make sure the foundation you’re building is just as stable.” That combination of faith and discipline would become a theme throughout her career. While Crystal’s platform spans beauty, lifestyle, and wellness today, it began with a deeply personal transformation: embracing her natural hair. For years, like many Black women, her relationship with her curls was shaped by outside expectations. “When I told people I wanted to wear my natural hair, I was discouraged,” she recalls. “Even my hairdresser told me, ‘You don’t have the kind of hair for that.’ But they didn’t even know my natural texture I had only ever gone to them for relaxers.” The experience forced Crystal to confront something deeper than styling techniques. It was about identity. “I had to heal the part of me that was told who I naturally am is not beautiful,” she says. As she began documenting her natural hair journey online, she discovered she wasn’t alone. Many women in her audience had never been taught how to care for their natural textures. “There was a huge educational gap,” she explains. “Growing up, it was always braids, sew-ins, or relaxers. But we weren’t taught how to do twist-outs, braid-outs, or wash-and-gos. We weren’t taught how to care for what naturally grows out of our scalp.” By sharing tutorials and personal experiences, Crystal realized her content was doing more than teaching styling techniques it was helping people unlearn internalized beauty standards. “Creating that content wasn’t just healing me,” she says. “It was healing other women too.” The impact even reached her own family. “My mom actually wears her natural hair now,” Crystal says with a smile. “She was the one who initially told me not to do it. Seeing how far she’s come is really powerful.” With over a million followers and major brand partnerships, Crystal is often approached with lucrative collaborations. But she remains selective about what she promotes.“I test everything myself before I agree to work with a brand,” she says. “My audience trusts me, and I never want to compromise that.” In fact, she once turned down a five-figure partnership from a brand she personally loved. “The product broke me out,” she explains. “Even though I liked the brand and the opportunity made sense financially, I couldn’t promote something that didn’t work for me.”Crystal believes audiences often underestimate the number of deals creators decline behind the scenes. “People only see what we accept,” she says. “They don’t see the opportunities we turn down to protect authenticity.” In a digital beauty economy where influence can shape purchasing behavior overnight, she believes creators have a responsibility but not total control. “We have influence, yes,” she says. “But people also have to use their own discernment. What works for one person might not work for someone else.”Over the years, Crystal’s voice has expanded beyond tutorials. In 2025, she moderated CurlyCon, spoke at the Sephora Impact Summit, delivered a keynote at the WEB “Who Is She” Brunch in Charlotte, and was named to xoNecole’s It Girl 100 list. She attributes the shift to one thing: vulnerability. “When I started sharing my personal struggles the good and the bad people connected with me on a deeper level,” she says. Her audience had first discovered her through hair tutorials, but once she began opening up about relationships, personal growth, and self-worth, the connection deepened. “People would come up to me and say, ‘I’ve followed you since CurlieCrys, but I love you even more now that you share your real life,’” she explains. Today , her content blends beauty with themes of healing, transformation, and emotional growth.“It’s not just about hair,” Crystal says. “It’s about understanding why we see ourselves the way we do.” Behind Crystal’s calm aesthetic and thoughtful storytelling is a daily commitment to wellness. Strength training, Pilates, and tennis are central to her routine not just physically, but creatively. “Working out is a direct pipeline to my mental health,” she says. “When I’m not active, I feel the difference mentally.” Exercise provides clarity and structure for her day.“Once I finish a workout and take a shower, I feel like I can conquer anything,” she says. “It sets the tone for everything else.” The discipline she built through fitness mirrors the consistency required to grow a creative career. “It taught me that if I can stay consistent in one area of my life, I can apply that same discipline everywhere else.”Crystal’s content is also known for its calm, curated aesthetic from her editing style to her home interiors. But the intentionality isn’t just visual.“I design spaces the same way I design content,” she says. “Everything has to evoke a feeling.” Whether filming a tutorial or decorating a room, she asks the same question: how will this make someone feel? “When I’m editing, I imagine watching the video as a viewer,” she explains. “If it doesn’t emotionally move me, I know I need to change something.” The same principle applies to her home. “When I walk into a room, I want to feel peace,” she says. “I want to feel like all the hard work was worth it.”If the younger Crystal growing up in New Orleans could see her now global travel, speaking engagements, brand partnerships the success itself might not be the biggest surprise. What would stand out most, she says, is how she transformed adversity into growth. “I would tell her everything worked,” Crystal reflects. “The sacrifices, the struggles, the long nights it all paid off.”And most importantly: “I’d tell her not to worry about what we’re about to go through,” she says. “There’s a reason for it. Just keep going. You’ll see the light at the end of the tunnel.” To keep up with all things Crystal, follow her here: @iamcrystalnicolee .

  • Leather, Lace and Layers: Cavalli’s Back to Black

    Under the creative direction of Fausto Puglisi, Cavalli returned with “Back to Black.” A collection described on Instagram as a “deeper dimension of Roberto Cavalli carnal, magnetic, alluring.” This lineup leaned into something moodier, sharper and distinctly gothic. Words: Amaya Capel Article Edits: Laura Casella Photo:  Courtesy of WWD Black dominated the runway. Not just as a color, but as an attitude. Across more than 40 looks, Puglisi emphasized a range of materials, from leather and sheer mesh to delicate lace and velvet. Photo:  Courtesy of WWD Mesh played a key role throughout the show. Sheer panels, second skin tops and barely there layers created a sense of exposure that felt intentional rather than explicit. It framed each silhouette without overpowering it, adding lightness against heavier fabrics like leather and velvet. Photo:  Courtesy of WWD Lace was approached differently this season. Instead of a romantic softness, it came with edge. The high necklines, long sleeves and refined lace introduced structure and depth. Photo: Courtesy of WWD Then came the feather detailing, which shifted the energy entirely. A sweeping black gown constructed with feather elements moved dramatically with each step. The embellishments amplified each silhouette turning something delicate into something striking and bold. Photo:  Courtesy of WWD From there, the runway began to build in texture and movement. Satin took center stage. Flowing and draping across each model with effortless motion. The pieces swayed, creating a sense of grace and softness that defined this segment of the show. Photo:  Courtesy of WWD Printed floral pieces also entered the mix.  Styled with bralettes and strong tailoring, they felt sharp and modern while also adding richness.  Photo:  Courtesy of WWD As the runway progressed, subtle color and velvet entered the sequence. Hues of vibrant pink and purple appeared toward the end of the show. The lilac skirt and textured violet top contrasted beautifully, while hints of hot pink lining added a playful sense to the collection. This season, Puglisi leaned into structure, fabric variation and shadow.  Delivering a Cavalli vision that was less about carefree glamour and more about controlled, gothic allure.

  • Polished Precision: The New Era of Gucci

    At Milan Fashion Week, Gucci opened a new chapter under Demna Gvasalia and it felt both purposeful yet organic. Words: Amaya Capel Article Edits: Laura Casella Photo: Courtesy of Gucci via Instagram The lineup with more than 80 looks introduced a vision that was clean, sleek and sharply fitted. In a message shared directly to Gucci’s Instagram audience, Gvasalia offered a rare, personal note on his direction for the house. Writing to followers on the brand’s official account, he explained his desire for Gucci to “become lighter, more refined, more emotional. Less intellectual, more feeling.” That shift was undeniable from the first look. Photo: Courtesy of Gucci via Instagram This was not a loud reinvention, but rather controlled. Jackets and trousers were tailored with exactness, hugging the form and sculpted perfectly onto each silhouette. Nothing appeared excessive, yet nothing seemed plain or basic. The simplicity carried weight throughout the entire show. Each piece looked considered, as though it was made specifically fit for the person wearing it rather than pulled from a rack. The result was polished to perfection. Photo: Courtesy of Gucci via Instagram Sequins also made a debut in a way that felt subtle. Each piece shimmered with purpose. A silver mini dress was the immediate eye catcher as it skimmed the frame with confidence, proving that texture does not need theatrics to command attention. Photo: Courtesy of Gucci via Instagram Outerwear also played a significant role as a defining statement. Collared coats, some oversized and some elongated to sweeping proportions, grounded the collection. They shaped the body with structure while keeping an effortless flow in movement. There was strength in their simplicity. Worn over layers or leather pants, they brought to life what Gvasalia shared on Gucci’s Instagram: “Heritage and fashion are not opposites, but lovers in coexistence.” Photo: Courtesy of Gucci via Instagram Accessories were sharp and purposeful. Bags added that perfect balance to the silhouettes, acting less as decoration and more as the finishing touch. They completed the look without overwhelming it. What made this debut compelling was its clarity. This Gucci debut felt both poised and elevated, timeless yet modern. Gvasalia created a vision that was assured and fully formed. If this is the beginning of his story at Gucci, it is one built on control, emotion and a renewed understanding of what it means for heritage and modernity to move together.

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