Why Celebrity Colorists Are Becoming Fashion’s Most Powerful Beauty Influencers
By Runway Magazine Editorial Team | June 6, 2026
Something has shifted in the beauty industry’s power structure. The celebrity colorist — once a behind-the-scenes professional whose name circulated only in whispered client referrals — has become a brand, a media presence, and an arbiter of taste. Tracey Cunningham — whose clients include Drew Barrymore — serves as Schwarzkopf Professional U.S. Creative Director of Color and Technique. She has 383,000 Instagram followers. Chris McMillan launched a namesake haircare product line at Sephora in 2025 — four decades into a career that began when he created “The Rachel” for Jennifer Aniston. Chase Kusero, celebrity colorist and co-founder of IGK Hair Care, speaks directly to consumers about seasonal color trends in major beauty media. Jeremy Cohen, whose clients include Jennifer Lopez and Michelle Monaghan, works from IGK Salon in New York City. His social media presence converts directly into booking inquiries.
This is the colorist-as-brand phenomenon. It is not a hair industry trends story in the conventional sense. It is a structural change in how beauty authority is created and distributed. And it is reshaping the relationship between celebrity hair, consumer demand, and the $100 billion professional hair care market.
How the Shift Happened
The traditional model of the colorist as brand was built on exclusivity and discretion. Cunningham built her career “almost entirely through word of mouth,” as FASHION Magazine noted in its November 2025 profile. That was “a rarity in today’s Instagram-driven beauty world.” “Clients spend hours in your chair,” Cunningham explained. “It’s not just about the colour; it’s about who you are as a person.” That combination of talent and trust defined an era when the colorist’s power was relational rather than public — when the colorist’s influence existed only in reputation.
The Instagram Equation
Social media changed that equation precisely because it made the work visible. A celebrity hair color post — the lived-in blonde, the dimensional brunette, the seamless balayage — generates engagement that no magazine placement can replicate. The image is immediate, the attribution is direct, and the aspiration is accessible. When a colorist’s work becomes viral content, the consultation inquiry follows within hours. This compression of the trend cycle has given colorists a commercial leverage they did not previously possess.
The leverage has multiple expressions and is a genuine beauty brand phenomenon. It creates brand partnerships, product lines, and media authority simultaneously. Most importantly, it creates the kind of social proof that fills a luxury hair salon booking calendar without a single advertisement. Dimitris Giannetos is quoted in InStyle’s 2026 hair trend forecasts with the authority of a tastemaker. His clients include Demi Moore and Kim Kardashian. Jacob Schwartz joined Schwarzkopf alongside Cunningham in October 2024. Cass Kaeding is cited by Lovelyish as a predictor of dimensional cocoa brunette, a shade that will “dominate throughout 2026.” Jenna Perry, Olaplex Global Brand Ambassador and hair professional, describes the apricot blonde as “fun and sexy yet natural-looking” — a quote that shapes how consumers discuss the shade at their own salon appointments.
Each of these is a brand moment. Each converts craft visibility into professional hair color commercial authority. For more on the beauty trends and viral products defining 2026, explore Runway’s glass skin K-beauty routine and beauty trends coverage.
The Product Line as the Next Frontier
The Product Line as the Ultimate Expression
The most significant commercial expression of the colorist-as-brand phenomenon is the hair product line. McMillan’s 2025 launch at Sephora is the clearest recent example. After four decades building the Beverly Hills salon bearing his name, McMillan translated that accumulated authority into a product range. “I’ve spent my career helping people look and feel like the best version of themselves,” he said at launch. That career, in other words, was the credential. The product line was the commercial extension of a personal brand that was already fully formed.
Daniel Moon, the colorist and founder of Hair Los Angeles, follows a similar model. His social media presence documents his work with Anya Taylor-Joy and other platinum blonde clients. It positions him as both a craftsman and a product authority. He actively recommends specific products in editorial contexts. The K18 Leave-In Molecular Repair Hair Mask gets direct promotional benefit from his endorsement. That endorsement is not a paid advertisement in the conventional sense. It is the natural extension of a technical authority that consumers trust precisely because his work is visible and attributable.
Kusero’s position at the brand, which he co-founded, represents the most integrated version of this model. He is simultaneously the colorist whose client list gives him credibility and the brand executive whose product line gives him commercial reach. The two roles reinforce each other at every touchpoint. When Kusero tells E! Online that “everyone is saying goodbye to cool-toned shades,” he speaks as a colorist, brand spokesperson, and trend authority simultaneously. That triple authority is a new phenomenon in the professional beauty space. For more on the beauty, hair, and style coverage defining 2026, explore Runway’s scalp care and haircare trend analysis.
What this professionals Are Actually Predicting for 2026
The colorist-as-brand phenomenon matters partly because of its structural novelty. But it also matters because these colorists are shaping the color story of 2026 in real time. Their predictions translate almost directly into salon booking patterns — a well-documented phenomenon in the professional hair industry.
The 2026 consensus among color experts is built on warmth and dimension. Laurie Heaps, LA-based celebrity hairstylist, identifies “cowboy copper, burnt sienna, muted cinnamon, and warm amber” as the dominant shades of the salon booking trends season. Jeremy Cohen confirms that “copper is here to stay.” Keep it “glossy and dimensional,” he says, “so it feels elevated rather than overly vibrant and stark.” The warm, dimensional direction represents a category shift away from the icy platinum and ash blonde formulas that dominated the previous several seasons.
The blonde story in 2026 is specifically about softness. Emily Claire reports: “This is definitely the year of the golden vanilla blondes. I hardly have anyone asking for icy silvers anymore.” Rivera, the founder of Phenix Salon Suites, describes buttercream blonde as resonating well with “clients that want to be blonde but want to keep dimension and depth.” Jacob Schwartz describes warm-toned colors, bright blondes, and golden pastel shades as the season’s defining palette. His platform as Schwarzkopf U.S. hair color trend ambassador gives those predictions unusual institutional weight. Rusk, master colorist and founder of Jes + Lou Beauty, adds that hair color trends 2026 will “embrace warmth, personalization, and bold expressions with next-generation shine.”
The Color Consensus
Behind The Chair’s 2026 report, which draws on conversations with celebrity stylists and brand educators, identifies a single unifying theme: color that “looks expensive without feeling overdone.” That phrase — expensive without overdone — is the commercial and cultural positioning of the colorist-as-brand phenomenon itself. Cunningham built this over four decades of word-of-mouth. McMillan translated it into a Sephora product line. Every hair colorist on Instagram is selling the same thing — one before-and-after at a time.
Why This Matters Beyond Hair
The colorist-as-brand phenomenon connects to larger questions about expertise and authority in the beauty industry. The traditional hierarchy — editorial to consumer, magazine to salon, product company to stylist — has been disrupted at every level by social media. But it has been disrupted differently in different categories.
In color specifically, the disruption has concentrated authority rather than fragmenting it. The colorist’s position is more powerful in 2026 than it was in 2006, not less. Social media gives the colorist a direct channel to a consumer who previously could not connect the red carpet look she admired to the technician who created it. That connection is now one Instagram click away. Consequently, the colorist who documents excellent work and builds a recognizable colorist brand has a hair color authority genuinely new in the industry’s history.
FASHION Magazine observed that Cunningham’s career grew through word of mouth in a world where social media beauty now amplifies word-of-mouth at the speed of a repost. As Fashionista’s profile of the hairstylist’s brand launch confirms, the colorist-as-brand trajectory is real, commercially significant, and available to any technician with the talent and the willingness to be visible. As Behind The Chair’s 2026 report confirms, colorists now define the annual color narrative for the entire professional hair industry. For all the beauty, hair, and cultural coverage that matters in 2026, trust Runway Magazine.
