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5-Minute Crafts' YouTube videos are compilations of videos previously posted on Instagram or Facebook. [7] [8] The channel's content consists largely of videos relating to crafts and life hacks, styled in how-to formats, and occasionally, science experiments.
Foxlin provides YouTube tutorial videos, guiding viewers through technical projects. She served as Executive Director for 501-c(3) non-profit Beauty and the Bolt which aims to lower the barrier to entry for women and minorities in STEM fields.
De Jager first began uploading videos to YouTube in 2008, at the age of 14, after watching MTV's The Hills while sick and being inspired by Lauren Conrad's makeup. [9] She then began searching YouTube for tutorials to recreate the look and was inspired to begin creating her own.
Since June 2007, YouTube's videos have been available for viewing on a range of Apple products. This required YouTube's content to be transcoded into Apple's preferred video standard, H.264, a process that took several months. YouTube videos can be viewed on devices including Apple TV, iPod Touch and the iPhone. [108]
How to Cake It is a digital web show on YouTube that posts videos showcasing Yolanda Gampp creating cakes that look like other objects, as well as baking tutorials. Her cake designs have been featured on various websites and in magazines. How to Cake It has expanded to selling merchandise, [1] holding live workshops, and a second YouTube ...
He is known for his drawing and custom art challenge videos. Hsieh created his first YouTube channel in 2013 while studying at the School of Visual Arts in New York City . Initially uploading art tutorials, Hsieh expanded to his current format and reached one million subscribers in 2019, later reaching over 25 million subscribers.
The videos include tutorials and reviews of various beauty products. The Chapman sisters are also currently running five-day make-up courses from their Norwich make-up studio. In 2020, Sam announced her retirement from the beauty community and creating content on any platforms as a job. [5] The Pixiwoo YouTube channel no longer exists. [6]
Smith began posting YouTube videos in 2017 on her channel Sailor J while working at a United States Air Force base. Her first videos were parodies of make-up tutorial videos which include social commentary, having been inspired by sexist comments she read on those videos.