About

Paris, 2025

My dream has always been to create. To create beautiful things.

- mn


This might get a little deep,

but I want to share a page from my personal journal.

Since I was a little girl,

I’ve always been captivated by women

their beauty, their elegance, their presence.

My mother used to paint my nails when I was still in elementary school.

I was obsessed with jewelry, with graceful gestures, with the tiniest details.

I remember my ballet teacher : Sonia.

She was magnetic.

Mixed-race, black hair always slicked into a high ponytail,

giant hoops in her ears, the posture of a queen.

I wanted to be like her.

But I was too young for earrings that bold,

so I’d wedge bangles into my earlobes to mimic her.

That was already a performance.

Already a costume. Already a role.

At the same time,

I was shaped by something else.

Action movies with my dad.

Male heroes. Speed. Violence, but mastered. Power, unapologetic.

I watched how my big sister and my little brother was raised.

And I somewhere in between

wanted to prove I could be the son.

Just in a girl’s body.

When I fell, I got back up without crying

and I made sure people saw.

I needed them to know I was strong.

As strong as a man. Stronger, even.

I never wanted to be a man.

I’m proud to be a woman.

But I wanted to be seen the way men are seen

strong. Bold. Ambitious. Powerful.

People often say I have masculine energy.

To me, that’s a compliment.

Because in our collective psyche,

masculinity is synonymous with strength.

And that strength

I’ve always claimed it as mine.

Today, through MARGO NUNES,

I tell that story.

I create for women who, like me,

never waited for permission to take up space.

Women who command the room.

Women who are not just muses

but the architects of their own myth.

Women who are both king and queen.

Authority and aura.

MARGO NUNES is a reminder:

the woman is the main character.

 

Win their eyes. Own their minds.

- mn