Self, Reimagined Overview

Redefining beauty and confidence in every season

Together with Browse Cosmetics, we defined what it meant to feel powerful in your own skin.

March 2–8 2026, Browse donated 50% of all proceeds directly to the Cancer Baddies Fund, providing financial relief to individuals in treatment and recovery.

Self, Reimagined is about redefining yourself after cancer, seeing your body not for how it changed, but for what it carried you through. It honors the scars, the strength, and the resilience that tell your story. Cancer may alter your appearance, but it also reshapes your perspective, inviting you to rebuild your identity on your own terms.

In partnership with Browse, a brand that celebrates your natural brow shape and everyday confidence, this campaign honors the woman who chose to see herself differently, to reclaim her power, and to define beauty beyond what was lost.

We highlighted survivor stories from Lauren, Mataya, Jess, Kiana, Sofia and Maria who shared their new relationship to self and beauty post-cancer.

This was our first major collaboration and Browse successfully contributed to The Cancer Baddies Fund.

❊ Testimonials

What part of yourself have you had to reimagine since diagnosis?

I lost all of my hair and gained a few surgical scars during chemo, and I was deeply ashamed of my appearance. Now I am trying to reframe my scars and short hair as reminders of what my body validly endured as well as symbols of my growth.

Lauren, Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

Cancer has shown me that my body is not the real me: it feels loss and pain, it holds my scars and shows my healing, but the core of me is always safe, deep inside, untouchable, no matter what my body has to go through. I feel free with my body and less concerned about other people’s opinions or views of my outside self.

Jess, Breast Cancer Survivor

Cancer changed my body, and that deeply impacted my confidence. For a long time, I felt disconnected from my reflection and struggled with feeling secure. I’m still grieving what changed, but I’m learning that my worth isn’t defined by appearance. My body carries a survival story.

Kiana, Breast Cancer Survivor