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Real talk: you know you’re going to get some rainbow gear for the Pride parade, those sunglasses for your upcoming trip to Bali, something to wear to your cousin’s wedding, and a new bag of coffee beans because returning to that commute and the office at 9 a.m. has been brutal — and that’s okay. You buy stuff. We all do. We’re Americans. It’s basically written into the Constitution at this point.

But they call it buying power for a reason. What you buy and where you shop matters, especially in this day and age where “pinkwashing” is common practice, with big-name brands and mainstream retailers commandeering Pride Month to release out-and-proud and “love is love” lines just to cash in as they do with just about every holiday or celebration. Worst of all, many of those same companies fund politicians who threaten to or take away LGBTQ+ and trans rights at every turn.

Whether you’re represented by a color on the flag or a supportive ally, it is important to put your money where your mouth is. One of the best ways to do that is to patronize businesses owned by members of the LGBTQ+ community. And not just in June when it’s top of mind.

What Are the Best Lesbian and Queer-Owned Brands?

We’ve rounded up 14 lesbian and queer women-owned businesses selling everything from keto snacks and shampoo to pillows and magic candles that you can order from the comfy spot on your couch all year long. And given that buying from them means you’re also raising up female entrepreneurs, you should go ahead and get two of everything.

1. Pink House Alchemy

Amazon

Emily Lawson founded Pink House Alchemy for the love of food and flavor. Developed in a 100+ year old pink house, the LGBTQ+ women-owned and run company produces “farm to bottle” simple syrups, bitters and shrubs that you can mix into a cocktail or get creative and cook with. Inspired by complementary flavors from barks, fruits, herbs, and botanicals, Pink House Alchemy works with all-natural ingredients to put those connections to the test and create some seriously stellar flavor bombs.

While you can find some of these sips in restaurants, bars, and coffee shops in nearly all 50 states, you don’t have to spend a night on the town to try your hand at shaking up some cocktails of your own — you can buy bottles like the sweet-tart-creamy Dark Cherry Grenadine and the charmingly zesty Ginger Syrup on Amazon and Walmart.com.

2. Freck Beauty

Freck Beauty

Founded by lesbian entrepreneur Remi Brixton, Freck was launched “with both middle fingers up and a life-long obsession with freckles”. Mimicking natural, sun-kissed freckles, their bestselling “Freck OG” freckle pen has definitely put its beauty mark on an industry, challenging traditional beauty standards by embracing beauty marks instead of covering them up.

For bold, Instagram filter-less makeup, Freck has quickly become a cult-favorite with Zillenials, TikTok and influencers like Caroline Calloway alike. All Freck Beauty products are vegan and cruelty-free, and inspired by the vibrant, diverse East LA community where Brixton lives. The rest of the skincare line features similarly buzzy options to create your summer-ready face, from a cactus moisturizer called “Rich Bitch“, to a lip and cheek stain called “Cheekslime.”

3. Nostalgia Coffee

Courtesy of Nostalgia Coffee

In her former life, Taylor Fields was an accountant at a massive Chicago firm. In 2018, she woke up and smelled the coffee (literally!) and broke up with her corporate gig to create Nostalgia Coffee. By January 2022, Nostalgia transitioned to a full-time roaster and bean subscription service. Fields works closely with farmers, often female and new to the industry, in places like Colombia, Brazil, and Guatemala to ethically source sustainably-grown beans.

She prides herself on paying thriving rates, giving back five percent of the annual revenue directly to her producers, and ensuring that leadership roles are inhabited by female, LGBTQ+, and BIPOC employees. Sustainability is also a key focus, their innovative compostable brew bags also uniquely combine the pour-over experience with single-serve convenience, making them perfect for camping, traveling, and living off the grid.

4. Coco & Breezy

Obi Nzeribe/Coco & Breezy

Twins Corianna and Brianna Dotson, aka Coco & Breezy, started designing sunglasses in high school to avoid making eye contact with their haters. After moving to New York City at 19, they decided to turn their self-preservation shades into a full-blown business that strives to design eyewear (and all corresponding marketing and advertising) that makes everyone feel welcome, beautiful, and cool regardless of their gender, sexuality, size, race or religion. That everyone just also happens to include Beyonce, Lady Gaga, Demi Lovato, Kehlani, and Prince, who directly sought out the Minnesota-born sisters on Facebook to invent the Third Eye glasses the artist wore on Saturday Night Live and the American Music Awards.

C&B now features blue-light blockers and optical frames (which all come with complimentary blue-light coating) in its inventory and virtual try-ons on its site.

5. House of Intuition

Courtesy of House Of Intuition

Cradle Catholics Alex Naranjo and Marlene Vargas, a former social worker and a medical billing company owner, joined forces in 2010 to create a repository of all things metaphysical in order to help regular folks tap into the magic they believe is innate in all of us but is often trained out by Western culture.

They’ve got 11 brick-and-mortar locations in Southern California and Miami, which are often visited by famous fans including Jennifer Lopez, Alicia Keys, Kendall Jenner, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Gina Rodriguez whenever they need to stock up on crystals, moon and intention candles, pendulums, tarot cards, evil eye amulets or “I Am Beautiful” or “Bless Me With Fertility” affirmation rollerballs. For Pride, they designed the Love Wins Collection and are donating five percent of the proceeds to the Trans Justice Funding Project.

6. KEHO

Courtesy of KEHO

Necessity is the mother of invention and Tekla Back, a Miami-based former PepsiCo employee who was frustratingly trying to follow a keto diet without eating meat, kept finding herself very, very hungry. So, she set out to create a healthy snack that ate like a meal. After three years of product development, KEHO, which means “living human body” in her native Finnish, was born in 2020.

Related: Best Keto Meal Delivery Services

Voted Best Keto Snack in the 2022 Eat This, Not That Food Awards, the hearty bars are vegan, nutrient-dense, non-GMO, sulfite-free, low-salt, and gluten-free. The current four flavors — Curry In A Hurry, Tex Mex Moment, Pizza To Go, and Thai Me Over — were inspired by the most popular plant-based Seamless orders and are made with whole foods, healthy fats, and lots of spices.

7. House of Dear

Courtesy of House Of Dear

After studying with hair artist Guy Mascolo of Toni & Guy fame, Holly Dear took what she learned about precision cutting, styling techniques, art direction, and product development to establish her own award-winning carbon-neutral salon in Dallas. Her mission was to create a clean haircare line that utilized ingredients found in nature (i.e. rose of Jericho, sunflower seed oil, witch hazel) to get to the root of common problems like frizz, split ends, lack of volume, dry scalp and dullness.

Her botanical-powered collection, House of Dear, which now includes shampoo, conditioner, age-reversing Resurrecting Balm and more, is free of sulfates, parabens, phthalates, and synthetic colors/dyes. And did we mention that it also smells like a dream? A jasmine-, bergamot-, clove-, and neroli-scented dream.

8. Coolhaus

Next time you’re screaming for ice cream (or a fairly close non-dairy facsimile) reach for this Los Angeles-based brand founded by Natasha Case and Freya Estreller. The then-dating, now-married couple started the company in 2009 armed with a dream and a busted $2,500 postal van they bought on Craig’s list and had towed to Coachella using the free 200-mile tow that came with their auto club membership.

Their frozen dessert empire is now made up of a Culver City Coolhaus scoop shop, trucks for events in LA and New York, and pre-packaged high-quality sammies, cones, pints, and cups in more than 6,000 grocery stores in creative flavors as far ranging as Street Cart Churro Dough, Enjoymint, Bananas Foster, Gimme S’mores and Take The Cannoli.

9. TomboyX

Courtesy of TomboyX

When Fran Dunaway and Naomi Gonzalez didn’t feel seen or heard by the existing fashion industry, the wives decided to start their own clothing company, one that would promote “radical comfort, size, and gender inclusivity and visibility” while also concerning itself with causing minimal environmental impact and hiring an incredibly diverse staff and suppliers.

Behind the seams, TomboyX gives its employees all the good stuff, from living wages and parental leave, to stock options and unlimited PTO. The team dreams up a wide range of bras, compression tops, underwear, swimwear, and more in both dependable neutrals and sassy prints. They throw in the occasional bucket hat, fanny pack, and hoodie for good measure, all of which will come in handy during long hot Pride parades.

10. Pipcorn

Courtesy of Amazon

Something to consider next time someone asks you to help them move — saying yes just might lead you to your million-dollar idea as it did for Jen Martin’s brother Jeff.

Back in 2011, the siblings had just finished packing up her apartment when hunger pangs attacked. The only thing they could find was a bag of mini heirloom popcorn kernels in the back of the cabinet. Impressed with how much flavor and crunch (and how little hull) was packed into such small morsels, they (plus Jeff’s wife Teresa) kickstarted Pipcorn in hand-stamped bags a year later at a Brooklyn farmers’ market. This is where they were discovered by an Oprah scout, and O enjoyed it so much that she put them on her annual favorite things list. (Later, she helped them perfect their truffle popcorn recipe.)

In 2013, the trio scored an investment deal with Barbara Corcoran on Shark Tank. Eventually, they added flavors like spicy cheddar Tabasco Sauce and other gluten-free treats made with non-GMO heirloom corn. What has not changed in 10 years is their dedication to not using anything artificial.

11. Minna

Courtesy of Minna

Sara Berks started this homewares brand named after her German immigrant grandmother in 2013 in Brooklyn. Now headquartered upstate in Hudson, the artist collective produces work in their studio and collaborates with master makers from Central and South America to stock the boutique with vibrant and ethically handmade products while helping create jobs and preserve regional craft traditions and techniques.

Many patterns, textures, and colors take inspiration from feminist art, the Bauhaus movement, vintage textiles, and global trinkets and are meant to be mixed and matched to create a look that is both modern and nostalgic.

12. Pals

Courtesy of Pals

Childhood can be rough, especially if other kids perceive you as different. It’s a lesson Hannah Lavon learned the hard way growing up on Long Island as a stuttering, queer Jewish girl who was mercilessly teased by boys. She never forgot how bad the bullying felt but grew up to appreciate being unique and wanted to design a product that encouraged kids to be open-minded, kinder, and empathetic.

Enter Pals, her sock company where bright pairs feature purposely mismatched cartoony designs. Think burger and fries, cat and dog, fire and ice. Sold in more than 800 stores around the world, the socks come in adult and youth sizes. Designs are also featured on baby booties, 25% of the earnings from which are being donated to Outright International in June.

13. Wildfang

Wildfang

Armed with cashed-in 401Ks and career experience at Nike, Emma Mcilroy and Julia Parsley dared to dream of a world where pockets were functional, button-ups didn’t constantly expose cleavage and the arms of blazers didn’t hang fair past the fingertips. Now, their blazers, coveralls, and faux leather skirts are seen everywhere from the racks at Nordstrom and music festival fields to board rooms. Even Megan Rapinoe, Janelle Monae, and Evan Rachel Wood self-identify as fans.

Wildfang, German for “tomboy,” has given more than $650,000 to good causes so far, and co-branded collections with TOMS and Nordstrom’s youthful and trendy in-house line BP hope to add to that total by raising funds for organizations like GirlForward and Year Up.

14. Diaspora Co.

Courtesy of Diaspora Co.

After a full-flavor childhood in India (and suffering one too many bland turmeric dishes after the ingredient became trendy in the U.S.), Sana Javeri Kadri decided no one should have to settle for lackluster spices that have languished on store shelves for far too long.

To bring everyone who wants to spice up their life the good stuff, she launched Diaspora Co. in 2017 with the idea that spices should be treated more like coffee and wine. In five years, her spice trade has grown from importing only Pragati turmeric, to sourcing 30-plus single-origin, heirloom spices including Aranya black pepper, Anamalai cacao, and Sugandhi fenugreek from 150 farm partners across India and Sri Lanka.

She takes regular trips to ensure growers and harvesters are up to snuff, and promises to sell only spices in the year they’re harvested. She’s also expanded to stock colorful gear like a tote for farmers’ market shopping and culinary tools often used in Indian (and neighboring) cuisines, like brass masala dabbas.

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15. Kaleidoscope Hair Products

Courtesy of Kaleidoscope Hair Products

From three-time teen mom in New Orleans to a titan of tresses, Jesseca Dupart spent years as an in-demand hair stylist/salon owner known for the big spritz molded styles popular in the aughts. She combined her indefatigable work ethic, extensive experience in the multicultural hair space, and a love of colorful statement hair to launch her own haircare line in 2014.

Along the journey, she gained two million followers on social media, married rapper Da Brat (with whom she stars on WETV’s reality hit Brat Loves Judy), and guided Kaleidoscope into a multi-million-dollar business. The line started with four products promising healthy hair growth, including the longtime bestseller Miracle Drops, and now includes more than a dozen sold at big-name retailers like Target, Walmart, and Sally Beauty.



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