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(Photo Credit: Island Boi Photography)
Few artists have left a mark on global dancehall quite like Spice—by force, by longevity, and by a style that refuses to be overlooked. For more than two decades, the Jamaican powerhouse—widely known as the Queen of Dancehall—has not only commanded stages with electrifying presence and razor-sharp lyricism, but has also emerged as one of the most defining expressions of bold Caribbean femininity in contemporary culture. From Kingston’s streets to global arenas, her influence moves seamlessly between music and image, where confidence, color, and identity are not separate ideas, but one continuous language she has long spoken fluently.
Now, that dialouge expands once again. Beyond the sound systems and stadium lights, Spice extends her creative world into fashion through her brand Graci Noir, a label rooted in Jamaica’s cultural heartbeat and its enduring relationship with style as self-expression. At the same time, she steps into a new musical chapter with her latest single, “Soft Girl Era,” a release that signals not a departure, but a softer unfolding of the same unapologetic identity—where evolution becomes part of the performance itself.
In conversation, she traces her love of fashion back not to a single muse, but to something more elemental.
“There wasn’t a specific person that kickstarted it for me,” she says. "Growing up in Jamaica, especially in the dancehall culture, fashion is everything. It’s part of how we speak before we even say a word.”
In Jamaica, she explains, style is language. It is an announcement. It is presence. “You can identify a Jamaican by the way they dress,” she says with a knowing ease. “Bold fashion is who we are.” Spice’s pride in her heritage is reflected in her recent track “Clean and Fresh,” where she dons the Jamaican flag, with that same national pride extending into her look.
Long before her fashion label became a structured brand, it existed as instinct—an extension of Spice’s early stage identity. Bright colors, daring silhouettes, unexpected combinations: her looks were never incidental, but an integral part of the performance.
“I used to have those bold fashion moments—whether I was on stage or just going through the airport,” she recalls. “People would stop me and ask, ‘Where did you get this from? How do you put this together?’ That’s what birthed it.”
That curiosity from others eventually became infrastructure. What began as personal styling evolved into a retail vision. Her boutique, Spicy Couture, opened in Jamaica and expanded across multiple locations—Kingston, Montego Bay, Mandeville, May Pen—bridging a gap she saw clearly in the local market.
At the time, access to fashion retail in Jamaica was limited. “People were traveling to places like Los Angeles just to shop in fashion districts,” she says. “We didn’t have that kind of access back home. So I wanted to bring that experience to us.”
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 25: Spice poses in the press room during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images for BET)
Getty Images for BET
Spicy Couture became more than a store. It became a destination for expression. But like many modern Caribbean entrepreneurs, her journey did not remain static. When the world shifted during the pandemic, so too did her business model. She rebranded, moving her fashion vision online and evolving into what is now her contemporary label, Graci Noir.
“It started in Jamaica, but COVID changed everything,” she says. “So I transitioned online and rebranded. That’s how Graci Noir came to life.” According to industry data, the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated a major shift in the fashion industry, with brands rapidly moving online as e-commerce accounted for roughly 40% of fashion sales in key markets, fundamentally reshaping how consumers shop.
If the early boutique years were about access, Graci Noir is about identity at scale—an international-facing extension of her aesthetic philosophy: inclusivity, boldness, and versatility without compromise.
That philosophy is deeply rooted in her training as well. A graduate of Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts in Kingston, Spice studied drama and music—disciplines that shaped not only her performance style, but her visual imagination.
“Everything I am was molded there,” she reflects. “In drama, you have to create different characters, different looks. You have to think creatively all the time. It’s competitive. You learn how to capture attention instantly.”
Even earlier, she says, the foundation was being laid at St. Catherine High School, where she led cultural festivals and stage productions. “I would decide what we were wearing, how we were presenting ourselves. That leadership and creativity—it never left me.”
Spice in an all-blue tailored tuxedo with satin detailing and matching blue hair, gazing directly into the camera with a commanding presence.
(Photo Credit: Island Boi Photography)
Today, that same instinct informs Graci Noir’s direction. The brand is intentionally expansive, refusing to confine women to a single aesthetic lane. “I think about everyone,” she says. “A young girl going to school, a woman going to work, someone going to a wedding, someone going to a party. I want all of them to find themselves in my store.”
That inclusivity extends beyond style into size representation, an area she is deeply intentional about. According to Vogue, nearly 97% of runway looks still feature straight-size models, with less than 1% representing plus-size bodies, highlighting the continued gap in fashion-wide inclusivity.
“My brand goes up to triple XL because women are not one size,” she says firmly. “From the beginning, I made sure of that. And I use plus-size models so women can actually see how it looks on bodies like theirs.”
It is, in many ways, a continuation of the same ethos that defined her music: visibility, confidence, presence. When asked what she hopes people feel when they wear Graci Noir, her answer is immediate: “Bold. Confident. That’s it.”
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 09: Spice performs onstage during the 2025 BET Awards Red Carpet Live at Peacock Theater on June 09, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Leon Bennett/Getty Images for BET)
Getty Images for BET
Her sense of confidence is not accidental—it is inherited from experience shaped long before fame.
“I’ve been an entrepreneur since I was a child,” she says. “I used to sell sweets in school to get lunch money. My mother sold food on the beach. I grew up watching that.”
For her, entrepreneurship is not a pivot from music—it is a continuation, a mindset shaped by necessity and refined by ambition. Still, balancing both worlds comes with tension. “The biggest challenge is time,” she admits. “I’m an artist, I’m a mom, I’m always traveling. And sometimes my business suffers because I can’t be everywhere at once.”
It’s a familiar paradox for global artists: the expectation to be everywhere, while quietly building systems that can sustain themselves in their absence. Yet even within that challenge, her vision remains clear. “In five to ten years, I want Graci Noir to be a self-running engine,” she says, “something that operates fully without me having to be in every detail.”
And as for her ambitions in music, they remain just as expansive. “I want to be on a Michael Jackson level of touring,” she adds. “Stadiums. Global stages. Headlining. I have a message, and I want it to reach millions.”
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 09: Spice performs onstage during the 2025 BET Awards Red Carpet Live at Peacock Theater on June 09, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Leon Bennett/Getty Images for BET)
Getty Images for BET
At the center of it all—music, fashion, entrepreneurship—is a philosophy rooted in survival, transformed into elevation. When asked what it means to be an “it girl,” she pauses, then answers with clarity shaped by lived experience rather than image.
“To me, it means survival. It means conquering. It means overcoming,” she says. “You had to come from somewhere. You had to beat the odds. You had to arrive through grace and hard work.”
It’s a definition that carries a distinctly Caribbean honesty—rooted in resilience, yet never confined by it. And it’s precisely that perspective that allows her influence to move far beyond dancehall, shaping not just sound or style, but a broader narrative of self-invention.
As she steps into her “Soft Girl Era,” marked by a new release and a viral challenge sweeping across social platforms, even softness becomes a form of power—an expansion rather than a departure.
“My new song ‘Soft Girl Era’ is about my transition into a softer version of myself—showing people it’s okay to change, to glow up, to take care of yourself, to pamper yourself," she says. “It’s about loving myself more.”
In the end, Spice’s story is not about reinvention, but continuation—of culture, of confidence, of Caribbean creativity moving fluidly across industries. For her, fashion was never separate from music; it has always been part of the same language. A story spoken boldly, worn with intention, and carried across borders—one look, one stage, one era at a time.
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