
Nicole by OPI Polish Gives Back
Teen Vogue lists "10 Most Wanted" beauty products that give back to charity.

Teen Vogue lists "10 Most Wanted" beauty products that give back to charity.
A salon in Florence, Kentucky helps with a blood drive in Cincinnati.

The magazine features Jessica's new Empowered Collection in time for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Jessica's Empowered collection brings awareness for breast cancer.

Woman's Day editor wants several beauty industry breast cancer awareness products.

TeenVogue is encouraging purchases that benefit breast cancer during October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Support Breast Cancer Awareness Month with these great for retail or salon use tweezers.

Pantene Beautiful Lengths was created to bring people together and donate beautiful healthy hair to create free wigs for women and girls who have lost their hair due to cancer treatments.

Aware lacquer was created to celebrate SpaRitual’s commitment to eco-friendly initiatives and its efforts to raise environmental awareness.

Tweezerman will donate $1 from the sale of the special edition tweezers to the National Arbor Day Foundation.

OPI held essay contest for children of employees and awarded $1000 scholarships and flatscreen computers to winners.
The second-annual Nail Artists Helping Children Charity Nail Competition takes place Sunday, November 4 in Rockford, Ill.
The “Nail Community Cares” campaign to fight breast cancer needs volunteers to help spread the word and peddle its signature pink high-shine buffers.

Across the country nail technicians are donating their time and services to help women who are making the difficult choice to leave abusive relationships and addictive lifestyles. Through community programs and church ministries, techs and stylists offer home care tips and hands-on application to help lift these women’s spirits and get them ready to enter the work force.

Several professional beauty industry organizations and manufacturers are helping to raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina.
What do you do when you’ve got 70 essays to read, all written by children in need of a computer? If you’re OPI president and CEO George Schaeffer, you’ll make sure every child gets one.