At eye level, Sephora is an onslaught of retina-searing marketing, beautiful models with faces the texture of dinner plates, punctuated by still lifes for Sephora’s Favorites, on top of every single beauty product you have ever seen, plus a million more you haven’t but have heard of, plus about 1,000 more, the existence of which has never crossed your mind. And below it all, inches above the floor, are squat, unmarked drawers with hidden handles that contain even more products. These drawers do not invite perusal. And yet June Diane Raphael is not afraid to peruse them.
This is how she finds a tube of Make Up For Ever lipstick in Candy Pink, an aggressively bright shade like the one her character wears on Netflix’s Grace and Frankie. (Not infrequently,…
