Thursday 25 July 2013

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob  Biogarphy

Source(google.com.pk)
During the Renaissance, women again began to show their hair. Renaissance hairstyles essentially revived Roman and Greek hairstyles, and added more imagination. Women decorated their hair with precious stones, pearls, ribbons and even shimmering veils. They also braided their hair, sometimes to form crowns around the tops of the heads. Again, hair was often dyed light colors such as blonde and gold. Some women used elements like alum, sulfur, soda, and rhubarb mixed together into a substance to dye their hair. In France, ladies pulverized flowers into a powder and then used a gluey mixture to apply the powder into their hair. Toward the end of the Renaissance, the general trend in fashion toward elaborate and whimsical styles extended to hairstyles. Women began wearing headdresses, at first a simple hood which then became peaked. Men wore broad hats that were sometimes trimmed with gemstones.
For your own Renaissance hairstyle, pull your hair back into a braid at the back of your head, adorned with a string of pearls or fancy cord. Experts recommend that you first comb dry hair smooth before starting. Braiding wet hair damages the hair, and makes it harder to get it to lay smooth. Pull the hair gently snug as you braid. Fold over the strands as high on the braid as possible (while still staying at the crossing point). Hold the hair close to the most recent cross-over to keep the folds in place. Comb the hair with your hand as you braid. If you feel or see hair bunching up, simply hold the whole braid in one hand while you comb the loose hair with the other. Use hair gel if desired. Then pin the middle of a gold cord or a strand of small pearls (available at a craft store) at the center of your forehead with a fancy clip or barrette (a circular one works best). Thread the strand through your hair, tucking the ends into the braid.Elizabethan Hairstyles
During the Elizabethan era, men and women wore very high collars, fashioned after Spanish couture. Men wore their hair short, while women combed their long hair upwards where it was fixed with a wire frame that formed a heart shape. Queen Elizabeth was a guiding inspiration in fashion during this era. Women strove to imitate her curly red hair, using different recipes for bleaching their hair. Some of these recipes used strange elements, including urine! False hair and wigs were commonly used during this era, as they were easier to manage. Red wigs were especially popular during this era. Finally, elaborate headdresses entered the fashion scene during the Elizabethan period. A headdress known as a "snood" was a type of hairnet that became highly popular. Similar headdresses appeared, such as a bag-coif which featured a gathered bag at the back covering the wearer's head. The fabric of the bag could match the dress, or could be made of a plain black silk, covered with gold netting. In Italy, a fashionable early 16th century headdress known as the "balzo" was similar to a snood. It was a large gathered bag, often made of woven strips of fabric, fancy gold material and lace, or other materials, worn over the hair. From the front, it looked more like a roll worn over the hair, as the greater portion of its bulk was above the head.
To try your own Elizabethan hairstyle, try wearing your hear in a snood reminiscent of a balzo. Modern snoods can be knitted, crocheted or made out of netting. Snoods made with thin thread look more delicate and are especially stunning when created out of silk, or silk combined with lace. Hair can be worn a variety of ways with a snood, either soft and loose or in fat soft braids that nest loosely into the netting of the snood. Smaller snoods can be worn over a loose chignon or soft fishtail braid. It doesn't matter whether hair is curly, wavy or straight. It can be gathered softly into a snood. The only thing that limits a snood is the imagination of the person wearing it!

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob
Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

Women Hairsytles 2013 Bob

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