While women's hair was long, curled and
high-maintenance, men used their hair in short, military-like cuts, or
pulled away and down from the face. Men's hair that handled the ears
went contrary to the grain, and was even illegal in some parts of the
U.S.
Film stars like Elizabeth Taylor, Lauren Bacall, while
popular men like Cary Grant, James Stewart and President Dwight
Eisenhower wore their hair in a nutshell, severe cuts and Marilyn Monroe
wore curly updos. Younger men had a little more latitude, but not much
more; some emulated Elvis and James Dean ingrowing pompadour or a
pompadour -like haircut.
For women in the 1950s, hair required a
lot of work. If your hair was directly, the easiest way to curl it was
to wear several little hair curlers (and/or wheels) within the hair, and
then let them fixed on the course of hours, or possibly a night's
sleep. Women may also go to the hairdresser and obtain a permanent,
which might chemically set the curls inside their hair till it grew out
or (with a few operations) increased slack with cleaning. Hits were
highly popular among women; women actually curled them to match the
remainder of their hair.
For African-American women, their kinky
or nappy hair was looked down on. Many women peaceful, or had their hair
chemically straightened, while African-American males held their hair
short.
Women's hairstyles became in size because the 1950s
progressed, and stylized waves waned in support of larger hairstyles,
like beehives. These required hairspray and blow drying to keep their
volume.
In fashion.The 1950s, wild hair was while in the 1950s saw
the advent of the hairdryer. The cap went over the brain; once the
heater turned on and was blocked in, heat had the tube and to the cap.
This was, primarily, a house model of the major, conical hairdryers you
would see in a salon.
Handheld hairdryers, and curling tongs, became
very popular in the late 1950s. Handheld hairdryers offered less detail
for that regular consumer, but might make the hair higher and greater.
For
men, electric razors also grew more popular within the 1950s. Guys
began shaving themselves in place of going to the barbershop; this
allowed their hair to become even faster inside the back, leading to the
renowned "flat-top" hair of a very small back with longer hair to the
crown of the head.
1950s hairstyles for men were restricted to
the flat-top or pomaded hair combed from the forehead. Daring young men
would get a pompadour or a quiff, a mixture flat-top pompadour haircut
and. The D.A. (duck's ass) haircut was common among young men, though it
had been frowned upon by more traditional users of the city.
Both
women and men wore short hair. Because of the high-maintenance of the
curled look, many women with straight hair held their hair at shoulder
or jaw -size. In terms of I understand, it was very uncommon to find out
grown men with mop tops, or "bowl cuts," throughout the 1950s. Even
small children imitated their elders with shorthair.
Several
young women, for example butch lesbians and teddy girls, went for a more
androgynous or masculine look. While in the 1950s this is even risky
and extremely rare: a strong hairstyle on the woman could get her
infected or caught for supposed homosexuality, then looked at as a
perversion.
This article appeared in the Vintage Styles section of Enjoy Your Model.
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