Posts Tagged ‘Fashionable Hair’

Different Fashionable Hair Style At Hair Games

December 21st, 2009

Being caught up red-handed to untamed your frizzy hair might be really disturbing. Not only you look unsightly but also you get mistaken for a wrong impression too. When a woman changes her hair style either for a new hair-do, hair dress or being ready for a new hair color, she makes a new personality out of her. Decide on what personality you want to give way and take a look on different and fashionable hair style at hair games!

Teen hair style. Being a teenager is one of the most critical parts of a woman’s life. It is essential that you are able to build your personality. Get the hottest new look and teen haircut for the graduation. Or you may decide beforehand what hairstyle you would do for the exciting Prom night! To help you out, have hair games guide you in the choosing for the teen hair style!

Wild hair style. Pick a wild hairstyle and put on crazy hair accessories. Dress up in wild crazy hair and have an effect for the night girl’s party! Try a full volume hair or a layered cut hair. Add up hair accessories and pair it with the right outfit!

Updo hairstyle. For a formal occasion a new hairstyle is in order, an updo hairstyle is the classiest formal haircut. This means that when you are in for an elegant event you need to make an elegant hairstyle. Get the clean and neat ponytail for you for a smooth finish. Or may be opt for full flowing locks to catch everybody’s attention! A word of caution however, full flowing locks should be smooth and tamed to avoid the frizzfest!

Long hair style. Definitely most women would like to sport long hair. But sometimes having a long hair can be a bit bore. Pick out a new long hairstyle at hair games that works for your face, pick a hair dye and eye color that you like. Matching accessories and jewelry to suit your hair style would definitely make you every inch of a woman.

Sweet beauty salon. Pick a cute new haircut at the sweet beauty salon. Choose an eye shape and eye color lens you prefer with lips and lipstick to play with at the hair salon. There are many hair styles to choose from. Spare an hour or two for your hair makeover and you will enjoy the result for a long time!

There are many hair styles to choose from. At hair games, you can find different hair styles to make a new personality and have the right impression that you want to create. Decide on what personality that you want and get the right hairstyle for it. Don’t let your self get red-handed again at the frizzfest!




By: Lenny Rose

Overcoming Hair Loss

October 29th, 2009

People all over the world see hair as important. In the west, for instance, almost all brides are prepared for their approach to the altar by the hands of an expert stylist. On that supreme day, their hair style may be the most elaborate they will ever have in their lives. At the opposite extreme, when a young girl of one of the aboriginal tribes of the Amazon jungle reaches puberty the women of the village ceremonially remove all the hairs from her head, one by one. The ritual significance and mystique of hair on these occasions are undeniable.

We use our hair to express our personalities – to conform, to make a statement, to help us feel good, to attract other people. Sometimes our hair even seems to reflect our mood, especially when we are sad or depressed. Our hair is perhaps our most distinctive feature. Any sudden change in its color or style startles our friends and produces comments from our family. Hair is an amazing material.

In the hands of an expert and with the use of modern hair products, it is soft and shining and seems full of life. Strangely, however, hair is dead. Hair, if properly looked after, made to shine with ‘health’.

Yet all too often this ‘crowning glory’ of ours is neglected. And then it can look shoddy, dull and lifeless. It becomes a constant disappointment, all the worse because we know that, however expensive and beautiful our clothes, if our hair looks a mess we won’t be seen as well-groomed, poised and fashionable.

Hair so often fails to do for us exactly what we expected. Its behaviour raises endless questions, sometimes almost despairing: Why did my hair suddenly look such a mess just before that vital interview? Could I have done anything to avoid that happening?

Why did it look fine when I walked out of the salon yesterday, and terrible this morning?

Why, when it had so much volume and ‘body’ when I was on that Mediterranean holiday, has all that gone now I’m at home in November?

Why was the results of that home color so disappointing?

Why does a woman’s hair so often ‘fall out’ after she has had a baby?

Why do so many men (and some women) go bald?

Why does so-and-so’s lovely red hair never perm very well? Why does my hair go out of condition so easily? What can I do to restore it?

All hairs naturally fall out at the end of the growing period. You can lose between 50 and 80 hairs a day. They tend to come out with brushing and shampooing. So if you wash your hair only once a week, it is perfectly in order for you to lose several hundred hairs at one go!

However, it is possible, a person may start to lose more hairs than usual. If this hair loss is significant, and if it persists, then sooner or later the scalp may become visible through the thinning hair. The condition is called alopecia. The name comes from the Greek word alopekia, which means ‘fox’: foxes (and also dogs) sometimes suffer from bald patches due to an unpleasant disease called mange. (Fortunately, humans do not get mange!) http://www.overcominghairloss.com




By: Jim Moore

Hair Styles in the 20th Century

September 30th, 2009

The Victorian Era was a subdued time following the decadence of the 19th Century. It was not seemly for a lady to have her hair loose and flowing about her face. Styles were sleek and smooth. Hair was often smoothed down with oils and curled into ringlets. Hairnets were worn during the day, to keep curls in place. Towards the end of the period, hair was worn plaited and wound into coils around the head and firmly fixed with a pin in to the nape of the neck.

The ‘Roaring Twenties’ abandoned the constraints of Victorian life and women caused a stir by going to the barber shops and wanting their hair cut into a bob. The free spirited young women of the twenties shortened their hair and their skirts and enjoyed themselves. With the advent of the ‘bob’ another, now familiar, hair pin evolved – the bobbie pin was born!

During the thirties hair grew once more, but not to the long locks of the beginning of the century. Hair was curled and pinned into rolls. As the thirties drew to a close, fashionable hair was nearly shoulder length and curled. Most women would also wear hats so the style was often smooth on top with rolls of hair pinned up to sit neatly around the hat.

Cinema had become an important pastime during the late thirties and forties. Many women would want their hair to be styled like their screen idols. Hair was longer, falling around the shoulders in waves. But of course, there was a war on so practicality took over. Hair would be pinned into a neat roll at the nape of the neck and often covered with a headscarf knotted in the front. Shampoo was hard to come by, plastic rollers and setting lotion was used to keep the style in place for longer.

With war out of the way and life becoming more ‘normal’ the ladies of the day wanted to look well groomed. Many ladies started to visit a Salons every week for a ‘shampoo and set’. Hair was becoming more sculpted. The French pleat became popular. Permanent waving was introduced. Hair often resembled a tight curly helmet!

During the 60’s a revolution was taking place. Many women worked and needed styles that were quick and easy to keep in place. A lot of ladies favoured the short, back-combed styles that could be quickly done and held in place with hairspray. Later in the 60’s the hippy movement started more carefree styles, long hair left loose adorned with flowers or ribbons and beads.

During the 70’s, big hair was the must have. Long layered hair that was curled on big rollers was the fashion of the day. It carried on the freedom of the 60’s but certainly made a statement about the ladies ‘crowning glory’.

Towards the end of the 70’s ‘Punk’ emerged. Hair was strikingly different with spiky styles and vivid colours. The ‘Mohican’ arrived with its stand up hair, dyed and spiked, down the middle of the scalp and the sides shaved. This style was usually sported by young men and was only worn by the few.

The 80’s saw more freedom and individuality. The big hair of the 70’s still remained but more ladies were having their hair cut shorter. When Prince Charles and Lady Diana married everyone wanted a ‘Lady Di’ haircut based on a bob. As women got more powerful jobs they wanted hairstyles to match their ‘power dressing’. The long bob was very popular with its precision cutting.

During the 90’s hair was very relaxed. Nearly anything goes and there were many styles. Long hair was favoured by many with the ‘Rachel’ (from the TV series Friends) cut being a big hit. Messed up hair became very popular and possible with all the new hair products like hair wax and putty.




By: Tom Jacobsen