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Band-Aid is creating a range of bandages that “embrace the beauty of diverse skin,” including hues that better match the skin tones of black and brown customers.
After years of petitions, Band-Aid is now launching a new line of bandages in a range of different skin tone colors — from beige to dark brown — to “embrace the beauty of diverse skin.” ...
Band-Aid Adding New Line of Bandages to Match Different Skin Tones. The brand hopes to "embrace the beauty of diverse skin" with their new product. By. Georgia Slater. Georgia Slater.
One-hundred years after the invention of the Band-Aid, Johnson & Johnson will launch a new line of the bandages in a range of Black and brown skin tones. “We hear you. We see you. We’re ...
BAND-AID launched new bandages for different skin tones, according to an Instagram post from the brand. The brand said it listened to customers in the Black community and is dedicated to inclusivity.
Band-Aid will now create bandages for darker skin tones in an effort to be more inclusive. Until now, the company has predominately made bandages that would only be considered flesh-toned for ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Band-Aid said it’s launching a new line of bandages to reflect a more diverse range of skin tones. Citing a commitment “to create tangible change for the Black community ...
It's taken me 45 trips around the sun, but for the first time in my life I know what it feels like to have a "band-aid" in my own skin tone. You can barely even spot it in the first image. For ...
Band-Aid’s rainbow of shades is getting brighter with the debut of new bandages to match more diverse skin tones — though some social media commenters have criticized the company for how long ...
Band-Aid is embracing diversity. Johnson & Johnson announced Thursday it would be rolling out several new skin tone colors for its bandages. “We hear you. We see you. We’re listening to you ...
Back in 2015, scientists at Washington State University published a paper detailing what they described as an electronic Band-Aid.The device consisted of a conductive carbon fabric that could be ...
In 2005, Band-Aid launched a line of "perfect blend" bandages to blend with multiple skin tones, company spokesperson Megan Koehler told NBC. That line was discontinued three years later.