Close Menu
Hang Cosmetics
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Thursday, July 16
    Hang Cosmetics
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • Beauty Tips
    • Beauty Trends
    • Hair Care
    • Makeup
    • Skin Care
    • Fashion
    Hang Cosmetics
    Home»Fashion»This Cult Korean American Creative’s New Brand Is a Nostalgic Love Letter to Girlhood
    Fashion

    This Cult Korean American Creative’s New Brand Is a Nostalgic Love Letter to Girlhood

    completebodyneeds@gmail.comBy completebodyneeds@gmail.comJuly 15, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    We all have that one friend with immaculate, maddeningly chic taste—someone who knows exactly where to eat, where to shop, and where to travel. The internet’s answer to that friend is Suea: a Korean American creative director whose curated snapshots of her life in Seoul, travels across Europe and Asia, vintage fit pics, and food diaries have earned her 52,000 followers on Instagram, with people in the comments begging her to reveal the names of her favorite restaurants, shops, and hotels.

    Declaring 2026 as the year of “less gatekeeping,” she finally acquiesced and launched her Substack, From, Suea, which compiles invaluable travel guides (Tokyo, Okinawa, Taipei), recipes, and personal dispatches on topics close to her heart, like hair care, K-Dramas, and her one true love: shopping. Now, with the launch of her new womenswear brand, Memory NYC, audiences can delve even further into her cute, nostalgic visual world. “I have a horrible memory, but I always remember what I was wearing,” she says of the meaning behind the brand’s name.

    After migrating from Seoul to Montana as a young child, Suea first fell in love with fashion as a teenager growing up in New Jersey, begging her parents to take her to the mall to visit the Abercrombie & Fitch store after church on Sundays. “I love a strong retail experience, and that’s what initially drew me to that whole world,” she says, recalling the store’s intoxicating smell (which was pumped with Fierce, the brand’s signature cologne), taxidermy moose heads, and highly covetable logoed shopping bags plastered with sun-drenched imagery shot by Bruce Weber. A career in fashion followed. After double majoring in international relations and French at UCLA—which she chose purely in order to study abroad in Paris for a year—Suea moved to New York to do a merchandising internship at Dover Street Market New York. She later worked at Opening Ceremony for five years across buying, marketing, and content, until it shuttered in 2020.

    Feeling fatigued by the fashion world, Suea later took a corporate job in the pandemic as a creative producer at Instagram. It was then that she began posting her striking, surreal DIY food concoctions on Instagram: cherubic angels made out of olive oil, airbrushed teddy bear cakes, and viral edible sculptures inspired by modernist furniture (most famously, a miniature Mies van der Rohe Barcelona chair made out of onigiri and a Le Corbusier LC2 armchair made from butter). After brands came calling, Suea quit her corporate job and Suea’s Dinner Service was born. She began working as a food artist full-time, creating content for brands, catering for fashion week events, and working as a food stylist for T Magazine. “I was in the first generation of creative food content creators on Instagram, and it was blowing up,” she recalls. “It was super lucrative, and it was my dream job.”

    But just like fashion, the world of Instagrammable food proved tiring too. “Girls at these fashion week events were not eating the food, especially when it looked that cute,” she recalls. “Also, it became dark when I started thinking constantly about my food in this very aesthetic way. It was like a new kind of eating disorder, because I would think everything I ate had to be cute so I could post it.” After briefly partnering with a friend on a brick-and-mortar cafe in Brooklyn, in 2024, she decided to move back to Seoul after being offered a job at a beauty brand.

    Suea then began thinking about launching her own brand after discovering a gauzy white fabric dotted with multicolored stars during a trip to Tokyo. When she returned home to Seoul with three yards of the fabric, she tracked down a tailoring ajumma (the Korean word for ‘auntie’) and the Tokyo skirt was born: a cute low-rise style with a pintuck waist inspired by beloved vintage skirts from Suea’s own wardrobe.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThe Making of Zendaya’s Beauty at ‘The Odyssey’ Premiere in New York
    Next Article Ugg’s New Pink Mary Janes Put Weird Flats in the Mainstream
    completebodyneeds@gmail.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Summer’s Hottest Chop The Scandi Bob, As Seen on Celebrities

    July 16, 2026

    Is This the Worst Mercury Retrograde Ever?

    July 15, 2026

    Paulina Porizkova Wanted to “Look 61” for Her Wedding—Here’s How She Prepped

    July 15, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • Summer’s Hottest Chop The Scandi Bob, As Seen on Celebrities
    • India Imposes Forced Labor Ban Amid USTR Investigation
    • Is This the Worst Mercury Retrograde Ever?
    • Ugg’s New Pink Mary Janes Put Weird Flats in the Mainstream
    • This Cult Korean American Creative’s New Brand Is a Nostalgic Love Letter to Girlhood

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Summer’s Hottest Chop The Scandi Bob, As Seen on Celebrities

    July 16, 2026

    India Imposes Forced Labor Ban Amid USTR Investigation

    July 16, 2026

    Is This the Worst Mercury Retrograde Ever?

    July 15, 2026

    Ugg’s New Pink Mary Janes Put Weird Flats in the Mainstream

    July 15, 2026
    About

    Welcome to Hang Cosmetics, your trusted destination for reliable, practical, and up-to-date information on all things beauty. Our mission is simple: to provide expert beauty guides and natural solutions tailored specifically for you. Finding accurate product knowledge can be overwhelming, so we focus on delivering clear, well-researched content that supports your everyday skincare and makeup routines.

    We're social, connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    What’s that smell? It’s Akigalawood

    April 26, 2026

    ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ is collaborating with fashion and beauty

    April 26, 2026

    Lemaire Draws Online Controversy in China Over Triggering Braid Design

    April 26, 2026
    Most Popular

    The beauty industry welcomes a flood of new peptide products

    April 26, 2026

    What’s that smell? It’s Akigalawood

    April 26, 2026

    ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ is collaborating with fashion and beauty

    April 26, 2026
    Copyright © 2026 Designed by Suhaj.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.