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  2. The French Crop Haircut Is Trending for Men, But Is It ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/french-crop-haircut...

    According to Moots, “The French crop haircut is longer on top and styled forward with a textured fringe. It’s typically complimented with a fade on the side to showcase your attention to the ...

  3. Quiff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiff

    Elly Jackson of La Roux wearing her hair in a quiff. The quiff is a hairstyle that combines the 1950s pompadour hairstyle, the 1950s flattop, and sometimes a mohawk.It was born as a post-war reaction to the short and strict haircuts for men.

  4. List of hairstyles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hairstyles

    The name is a portmanteau of faux, the French word for false or fake, and 'mohawk'. Flattop: A type of crew cut where the hair on the top of the head is cut as a flat plane giving a levelled 'flat-topped' look. French Crop A haircut which is short at the sides and back, and medium length at the crown, worn with a fringe. [2] Frosted tips

  5. Regular haircut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_haircut

    Other names for this style of taper include full crown, tight cut, and fade. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] : 50 [ 14 ] : 40–43 [ 11 ] : 41–45, 100 [ 3 ] : 282 [ 15 ] : 133 The hair on the sides and back is cut with a coarse clipper blade from the lower edge of hair growth to or nearly full up to the crown.

  6. Bowl cut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowl_cut

    Historically, the bowl cut was popular among common European and Asian men, being an easy neat cut done by a non-professional. Indeed, it was done by putting a cooking pot of a fit size to the level of ears, and all hair below the rim was cut or shaved off. [2] [failed verification] In some cultures it was a normal type of haircut. In other ...

  7. Eponymous hairstyle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eponymous_hairstyle

    Audrey Hepburn with style-setting "gamine" haircut in Roman Holiday (1953) Marilyn Monroe, 1954. The "Audrey Hepburn look”, associated since the 1950s with the Anglo-Belgian film actress, owed itself principally to the intrinsic chic of Hepburn herself (a factor identified by Edith Head [3]) and the designs of French couturier Hubert de Givenchy.