There’s a particular kind of woman who doesn’t just walk into a room—she shifts its center of gravity.
Yaribey Baro is that woman.
You won’t find her chasing trends or pandering to the fleeting promises of the beauty industry. Instead, she moves with a rare conviction: beauty is not a product to be sold; it’s a freedom to be reclaimed.
And she’s been reclaiming it her entire life.
Havana, First Light
Long before magazine features and bold studio openings, there was a little girl in Havana twisting ribbons and scraps of cloth into masterpieces. “We didn’t have much,” Yaribey says, almost laughing at the memory. “But what we had was creativity—and fire.”
The streets of Cuba, vivid and unruly, taught her early that beauty isn’t perfection. It’s improvisation. It’s resilience. It’s the quiet rebellion of choosing yourself, even when the world doesn’t hand you much to work with.
That spirit never left her.
Crossing Oceans, Carrying Dreams
The journey to America wasn’t romantic. It was messy. Hard. Unforgiving.
“I arrived with a suitcase and a promise to myself,” she remembers. “That whatever this new life demanded of me, I wouldn’t lose my voice.”
And so, slowly, bravely, she rebuilt her life. Learning a new language, navigating a new culture, carving out a tiny piece of ground where her dream could breathe.
Hairstyling was never “just a job.” It was a weapon. A soft, glittering sword against a world that tries so hard to tell women—especially women of color—how they’re allowed to be seen.
The Studio That Became a Sanctuary
When the world shut down in 2020, Yaribey did the unthinkable: she opened Beauty by Color Inc.
It wasn’t the “smart” choice, not according to spreadsheets or business forecasts. But it was the right one.
“People didn’t just need haircuts,” she says. “They needed resurrection.”
Inside the walls of her studio, something rare happens: people remember themselves. Through every bold dye, every sharp cut, every tender moment at the mirror, Yaribey tells them, You are allowed to take up space.
Beauty by Color is a love letter to individuality—a refusal to flatten people into templates. Here, you don’t fit in. You break free.
Beauty as Rebellion
Ask Yaribey what makes her different from every other stylist with a social media following and a scissor kit, and she’ll answer without hesitation:
“I listen.”
Not to trends. Not to algorithms. To people.
Their real, complicated, breathtaking selves.
“I don’t sell beauty. I reveal it,” she says simply. “It was always there—you just needed someone to reflect it back to you.”
Motherhood, Legacy, Fire
Behind the public victories lies the quieter one: being a mother, every single day.
Yaribey’s Son watches her hustle, her joy, her grit. She sees the early mornings and the late nights, the hard conversations and the soft ones. “I want her to know that she doesn’t have to apologize for dreaming big,” Yaribey says. “That she can build empires from love.”
That’s the real masterpiece Yaribey is crafting—one far greater than any hairstyle.
The Road Ahead: Bolder, Braver, Louder
Yaribey isn’t stopping.
More education. More platforms. More spaces where marginalized artists can be seen, heard, and celebrated.
“I want to create a world where no one feels they have to ask for permission to exist loudly,” she says.
As we leave the studio, sunlight spills across the floor. In the corner sits an old, worn pair of scissors—the first she ever owned.
They’re proof of something bigger than ambition or success.
They’re proof that when you dare to color outside the lines, you don’t just change your life.
You change everything.
Because beauty, real beauty, doesn’t whisper.
It roars.
And Yaribey Baro is leading the revolution.
(Follow Yaribey’s journey at @yaribeybaro and @beautybycolorinc.)