Friday, 26 December 2014

Review of the Year 2014 - The Sad Sad Tale of Quirk

Hi Goddesses



Today's post is a sad one, and a story which has touched me personally this year, as it centres on one of my closest DD pals, Kerrie from Pish Posh and Polish.


For as long as I have, Kerrie has run a blog.  As a guitarist, she has short nails, and has endured endless trolling for not having pretty claws like other bloggers.  Despite it being upsetting, Kerrie has handled it like a pro, and I salute her response to such bullying.



Last year, she finally did the thing she'd wanted to do for ages, and launched her own indie brand - Quirk (which I named).   It was the first UK indie which for me had the same creative and qualitative aspects as the best of the US indies, and I supported her however I could.


Unfortunately, life is full of bitter people, and someone who had a personal agenda against Kerrie reported her polishes to the Trading Standards people.  Unlike in the USA, in Europe, each polish has to be tested and proven safe before it can be sold - not possible when the certificate costs £200 per polish you create.


So this person reported Kerrie, and as a result Kerrie lost her business, her future and her passion.  Other UK indies closed shop too, out of fear.  I have a few other thoughts - but let's hear Kerrie's story first.

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I had always wanted to start my own Indie polish line. I like to analyse  things (which probably stemmed from my Degree in English Literature)  and love polish that represented things. I always wanted to create a line that was inspired by my favourite things, where every single glitter had a particular representation and a real reason for being there. 

I had been making my own polish for a long time before the first Indie Polish brands launched in the UK. As soon as I saw polish base (which due to restrictions in the UK had always previously been hard to buy in bulk) was now available in the UK I jumped at the chance to make my dreams a reality.



Two years ago I had come out of University with a degree but was unable to find work so for me making polish was always a business and not just a hobby. This meant I became extremely stringent with testing and the professionalism of my brand.

In October 2013 I launched my first four polishes after 6 months of testing (and countless more of other tests and research).



The Indie Polish scene in the UK was sparse when I started but I already wanted to create a high calibre product.  By the Christmas of that year (three months) I had been voted as having released two of the best polishes in the UK indie Awards (for Peace is Free and Fantine) and was overall awarded second place for best brand. For only being open three months this made me incredibly proud! 

I only had a small capital when I started Quirk so was unable to create large amount of polish however I always sold out very fast which I hope meant my polishes very quite popular.



The UK indie scene flourished quickly, I helped admin a group of UK polish makers and really supported other makers. I held lots of giveaways that encouraged the makers to take part and expand their following (like my Support small business giveaway and the Digit-al Dozen Giveaway). In all everyone was quite supportive of each other.

After having moderate success with Quirk I took the big step to put Quirk on hiatus. As I said before Quirk was my business, I was now self employed. Due the quality of my ingredients and the time that went into creating a high quality product I was actually selling at a small loss. Therefore I took the big step to sell most of my personal polish / makeup stash to triple my initial investment into Quirk.




I bought all my ingredients and started production again.  One day in June just before I started mixing polish I logged onto my laptop as normal (to check for Custom orders) and I found a message from Trading Standards saying that my handmade polish did not meet EU regulations, because they were not tested in a lab, and I must stop production immediately.



So I had to stop, to this day I still have many bottles of stock I cannot sell. Hundreds of pounds of supplies I haven't been able to sell and loads of bottles of glitter / pigments / polish in different phases of testing.

A few other Indie polish makers in the UK shared my concerns over this and decided to stop selling although many continued after me at their own risk.



No one else has been contacted by Trading Standards either before or after me.  This includes UK indies that have sold vastly more bottles of polish in my 8 months of selling, EU based Indie makers and  UK/ EU stockists of Indie polish.

I have been in constant communication with Trading Standards since then as I am working on the legalities of selling my product and the logistics of getting the appropriate tests done.  My base is tested and passes EU regulations and so does my glitter but when mixed together they need to be re-tested in a lab, something that I will never be able to afford.




At the time of my original blog post I thought I had been unlucky that I had been found out, however since then Trading Standards have VERIFIED that they recieved a notice from a 'member of the public' asking if my product was in a legal position to be sold. The only person that would know this would be a member of the polish community.

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I really urge you to read Kerrie's own blog post.  I've been with her every step of the way on this journey, and it leaves a really unpleasant taste in my mouth.  Either someone was jealous of her success, or they did it to be mean.


The only people buying Quirk were nail polish lovers in the nail polish community.  It wasn't big enough to be bought by the general public.   Additionally, the tone of the letter of complaint to the Trading Standards is not one of a concerned, uneducated customer; it reeks of set-up.


So why tell this story?  Well for one, it's changed Kerrie's life, and not in a good way.  Secondly, it's robbed her of her love of blogging, and her desire to be creative.  But it's also a cautionary tale of bullying, and how this community, despite being generally awesome, has some dark little corners.


Kerrie and I both know who did this.  Unfortunately we'll never be able to prove it, and I think it's a very sad reflection that we live in a world where so much can be lost just by one person's mean streak.


This story has defined Kerrie's year, and changed the UK indie scene.  Hopefully, that gave someone a lot of pleasure.



Comments (23)

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I read Kerrie's original post when she had to close shop, but didn't know the full story, so I've been waiting for this blog post. Thank you for bringing attention to Kerrie's story and what happened to her. People are so petty and mean, I hope Karma comes around and gives this person what they deserve.
My heart breaks a little for Kerrie. This is an awful tale and I don't even know what to say, other than I wish Kerrie the very best. <3
I had never previously understood why there were so few indie polish makers in the UK in comparison with elsewhere; I guess the bureaucratic red-tape is the reason why. I'm so sorry for Kerrie; it's hard to put your heart and soul into something and then come up against such a big brick wall. Having seen her beautiful polishes, she is clearly a very talented lady and I hope very much that she can find a way forward when she has recovered from this setback.
starting any business is not easy ... and red tape ruins many ... would crowd funding to find investors work - would those of us with a passion for nail varnish help those who have the vision, creativity and drive to make an indie product?
5 replies · active 535 weeks ago
I don't know Linda, but thats an excellent suggestion xx
Princess Polish's avatar

Princess Polish · 535 weeks ago

That's such a smart idea! Kerrie, I know a ton of us would love to support you on this. I'm so sorry that someone's envy torpedoed all of this for you. Keep your head up, sweetie! xoxo
I'm not sure if Kickstarter works in the U.K. but might be something to think about. With such strong regulations it makes it so difficult for small companies to florish.
That is a great idea. Perhaps it could be a way to get her started again and show that mean old troll who turned her in that she can't hold Kerrie back?
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This is so awful. I know I would definitely share this and give a little of my own funding for this if Kerrie decides to give crowdsourcing a try. Chin up, Kerrie. You are the good person in all of this. You will be rewarded one day.
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Such a shame.
It is such a shame someone so petty with nothing better to do has ruined. Kerrie I hope 2015 is a better year for you. I can feel the pain and passion in both you and debbie in this post and thank you to you both for sharing this
That's really a shame.
Eurgh - some people are just vile! Kerrie is such a great blogger and comes across as so nice. To put so much effort and passion (not to mention money!) into something and have someone pathetic and petty sabotage it......it beggers belief. Crowding funding is a good idea though Linda.
Brenda Howell's avatar

Brenda Howell · 535 weeks ago

I wish I had been able to get my hands on some Quirk polish!!
My friend Z ( Elizabeth Weaver) found out about her polish when she was in England!!
The thing I can never figure out is how something so fun as polish brings out the worst in some people!!
I hope things turn around and Quirk can rise again!!
It's so sad! I still hope that she will be able to sell her nail polish. We need more indie in the EU :)
Could Kerry maybe sell the base and ready mixed dry ingredients as little kits to combine yourself? I think there's someone else who does that and that must be within the rules?
1 reply · active 535 weeks ago
This is a great idea & would solve the restrictions issue AND foil the bitter old troll (Karma always catches up, I promise you!)

I for one would definitely purchase in this form & it would give those of us with less talent & creativity a small feeling of frankening.
I have no idea what that would mean workwise for Kerrie but if things work out I'd love to purchase.
Kickstarter or something similar is a great idea, I would definitely donate as would probably countless other indie polish lovers. I've seen different donation levels, as they go up in price, offer increasingly bigger perks (such as donate $20 get 20% off, $50 get a free polish, $100 get 3 free, etc) which is a great incentive to donate. Keep us updated, I'm in!
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How terrible! Bullying is done by someone who is petty and jealous and in this case a coward! They should, however know that nothing is as true as the old adage 'what goes around comes around' and they will get what is coming to them. Kerry made beautiful polishes and I hope a way can be found for her to begin again. Please keep us posted - I will be happy to support her in any way I can. I love the idea of the 'kits'! I would definitely purchase some. Whatever I, as a member of this indie community can do, I will do!
There are so many upsetting things about this situation that I cannot even fathom or understand, but bullying someone about their nail shape?? I so hope that's not where all of this started; it would be too senselessly cruel to even imagine. I have kind of lazily started a project of doing fun manis for people and then collecting pictures; friends, family, most of them women who tell me their hands are too ugly to be on a blog (many of them are older women). I tell them that they are silly; their hands are perfectly normal, perfectly beautiful hands just making their way through life. I haven't started posting them yet, but I think that maybe I should, because people need to start seeing and appreciating hands in all forms and all stages of life. After all, if we criticize short nails, or the hands of older women, we are really setting ourselves up to be unhappy as we age and our bodies change.
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2 replies · active 535 weeks ago
totally agree with you - and it sounds like a great project xx
Totally agree! I'm getting older by the minute and as a blogger, I do wonder how my aging hands will be viewed. It won't stop me, mind you, but I wonder.

Hugs to Kerrie - she's such a sweet person. ♥
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