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  2. These Medium-Length Hairstyles Will Look So Gorgeous on ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/medium-length-hairstyles-look...

    Here are the 40 best medium-length haircut and style ideas for women over 50, including bobs, lobs, and face-framing layers with bangs. ... Read on for the best medium-length hairstyles for older ...

  3. Stylists Say These Are the Best Hairstyles for Women Over 60

    www.aol.com/youthful-celebrity-hairstyles...

    Curly bob. There’s a reason many older women choose to have chin-length hair, instead of longer tresses: “Long hair drags the eyes down, emphasizing drooping facial features,” Butterworth says.

  4. List of hairstyles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hairstyles

    This style is most common among women. Bouffant: A style distinguished by smooth hair that is heightened and given extra fullness over teasing in the fringe area. Bowl cut: Named for the shape of the style as much as for a once-common method of achieving it (i.e. using a bowl to style the cut by placing it on the head and trimming the open hair).

  5. Hairstyle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairstyle

    This is somewhat less true of African-American men, who wear their hair in a variety of styles that overlap with those of African-American women, including box braids and cornrows fastened with rubber bands and dreadlocks. [36] In the 1980s, women pulled back their hair with scrunchies, stretchy ponytail holders made from cloth over fabric bands.

  6. Afro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro

    The afro became a powerful political symbol which reflected black pride and a rejection of notions of assimilation and integration—not unlike the long and untreated hair sported by the mainly White hippies. [2] [6] [7] To some African Americans, the afro also represented a reconstitutive link to West Africa and Central Africa. [3]

  7. Cornrows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornrows

    African-American, Afro-Latino and Caribbean folklore also relates multiple stories of cornrows being used to communicate or provide maps for slaves across the "New World". [8] [45] Today, such styles retain their link with Black self-expression and creativity, and may also serve as a form of political expression. [9] [46] [47]