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The ‘60s was also the decade when women of color started to embrace their natural hair more. Tired of straightening their curls for more than a century, they left them natural and cut short.
The style required that the hair were combed back around the sides of the head. The teeth edge of a comb was then used to define a central parting flowing from the crown to the nape at the back of the head, resembling, to many, the rear end of a duck. The hair on the top front of the head was usually that of a pompadour.
The 1960s brought us The Beatles, Bob Dylan, beehive hairstyles, the civil rights movement, ATMs, audio cassettes, the Flintstones, and some of the most iconic fashion ever. It was a time of ...
The sideburns of the 1960s and 1970s saw a massive decline in fashion in late 1970s. Big and eccentric hair styles were popularized by film and music stars, in particular amongst teenagers. Although straight hair was the norm at the beginning of the decade, as many late 1970s styles were still relevant, by around 1982 the perm had come into ...
False eyelashes were worn by women throughout the 1960s. Hairstyles were a variety of lengths and styles. [2] Psychedelic prints, neon colors, and mismatched patterns were in style. [3] US First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy arrives in Venezuela, 1961. In the early-to-mid 1960s, London "Modernists" known as Mods influenced male fashion in Britain. [4]
The’90s were Winona’s world and we were just living in it. This pixie was chopped by mononym hairstyling legend Garren , who gave her delicate baby bangs to match the short chop. Ron Galella ...
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American actress Natalie Wood with a beehive in a 1962 promotional photo for the movie 'Gypsy'. The beehive is a hairstyle in which long hair is piled up in a conical shape on the top of the head and slightly backward pointing, giving some resemblance to the shape of a traditional beehive.