Duration 23:51

How To Cut a Textured Bob // Short Haircuts for women

700 989 watched
0
3.3 K
Published 4 Apr 2014

So many variations of the bob. I show you some great texturing techniques in this video. I love doing short haircuts for women. ↓↓↓↓ CLICK SHOW MORE ↓↓↓↓ **New Video Every Tuesday** Don't forget to watch my music video!!! /watch/ADVyz-5EOBmEy Be sure and subscribe to my personal channel April's Life /user/AprilShowrz ** you can also find me on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/hair101withA ... or visit our website at http://www.hair101withapril.com/ or on instagram at http://instagram.com/hair101withapril For collaborations or business inquiries email -- hairgilr101@gmail.com Need to ship something? Hair 101 with April c/o April Orgill P.O. Box 672 Lehi, Utah 84043-0672 How To Cut a Textured Bob // Short Haircuts for women /user/CuteHair1 ... from wikipedia Historically, women in the west have usually worn their hair long. Although young girls, actresses and a few "advanced" or fashionable women had worn short hair even before World War I[1][2][3][4]—for example in 1910 the French actress Polaire, (above) is described as having "a shock of short, dark hair",[5] a cut she adopted in the early 1890s[6]—the style was not considered generally respectable[7] until given impetus by the inconvenience of long hair to girls engaged in war work.[8][9] English society beauty Lady Diana Cooper, who had had bobbed hair as a child,[10] kept the style through her teenage years[11] and continued in 1914 as an adult.[12] Renowned dancer and fashion trendsetter Irene Castle introduced her "Castle bob" to a receptive American audience in 1915, and by 1920 the style was rapidly becoming fashionable.[13] Popularized by film stars Colleen Moore and Louise Brooks in the early 1920s, it was still seen as a somewhat shocking statement of independence in young women, as older people were used to seeing girls wearing long dresses and heavy Edwardian-style hair. Hairdressers, whose training was mainly in arranging and curling long hair, were slow to realise that short styles for women had arrived to stay, and so barbers in many cities found lines of women outside their shops, waiting to be shorn of hair that had taken many years to grow 1960s and beyond Anna Wintour with a bob haircut and a fringe/bangs In the 1960s, Vidal Sassoon made it popular again, using the shape of the early bob and making it more stylish in a simpler cut. Its resurgence coincided with the arrival of the "mop top" Beatle cut for men.[19] Those associated with the bob at that time included the fashion designers Mary Quant and Jean Muir, actresses Nancy Kwan, Carolyn Jones, Barbara Feldon and Amanda Barrie, and singers as diverse as Keely Smith, Cilla Black, Billie Davis, Juliette Gréco, Mireille Mathieu and Beverly Bivens of the American group We Five. Many styles and combinations of the "bob" have evolved since. In the late 1980s, Siouxsie Sioux, lead singer of Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Corinne Drewery, singer of Swing Out Sister, had bob cuts for a short time. Singer Linda Ronstadt sported a very "Louise Brooks" inspired bob on the cover of two Grammy award winning albums in the late 1980s. 1987's Trio album with Dolly Parton and Emmylou Harris and her 1989 release Cry Like A Rainstorm, Howl Like The Wind. She also wears the cut in the video for her duet with James Ingram, Somewhere Out There. Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of American Vogue since 1988, apparently had hers trimmed every day (Times 2, 10 July 2006). In the early 1990s Cyndi Lauper had a bob haircut with very unusual colors; soon afterwards, the cut became identified with Uma Thurman's character of Mia Wallace in Quentin Tarantino's 1994 film Pulp Fiction. In the mid to late 1990s, T-Boz of TLC also had a bob haircut with very unusual colors that was asymmetrical with bangs. Also, for the first two seasons and the first two episodes of the third season of Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, the character of Lois Lane (Teri Hatcher) had a trademark bob haircut. Also, in Barry Sonnenfeld's 1997 film Men in Black, the character of Dr. Laurel Weaver (Linda Fiorentino) also sported a bob.

Category

Show more

Comments - 0