Writing About Hair
Writing About Hair
Writing About Hair
By Sharla Rae
The #1 thing about hair descriptions is Do Not overuse them. You do not
want to be known as hair girl or hair boy!
Examples:
A tomboy might have a very short, non-nonsense haircut. Then again, she
might hide long tresses under a ball cap, because secretly shed like to be
noticed as the girl she really is.
Coiffure
Curls
Down
Fringe
Fuzz
Locks
Mane
Mop
Ringlets
Shock
Strands
Tresses
Tufts
Wig
Wool
Baby fuzz
Bleached hair like mushy wet works
Blue feather hair of old lady
Bristle top
Broom chopped
Cat-fur fine
Cotton candy hair, fine
Cottony
Dandelion fuzz
Down
Gummy
Horsetail coarse
Moldy hay
Short-cropped and stiff
Soft and lush
Soft curls and waves
Yellow straw
Black
Coal
Crows wing
Ebony
Jet
Indian Ink
Midnight
Obsidian
Onyx
Raven
Brown
Amber (reddish)
Ash brown
Auburn (reddish)
Baked Clay
Bison
Brunette
Burnished
Camel
Caramel
Chestnut
Cinnamon
Clove
Dark beer
Dark Earth
Dark toffee
Dirt
Fudge cycle
Glazed ginger
Maple Sugar
Mink
Mousy
Muddy
Nutmeg
Pecan
Rawhide, dark reddish
Root beer
Russet
Tobacco
Tortoise Shell
Walnut
Reds
Auburn
Berry
Brassy
Brightest
Burgundy
Burnished copper
Carrot top
Cinnabar
Clown wig red
Cognac
Dull brick
Flame
Garish brass
Orange
Russet
Scarlet
Strawberry
Wine
Ash blond Lacks red or gold highlights (verges on green tones); light
mousy blond, medium and dark blond, dishwater, beige
Ash brown Browns lacking warm/red tones tones; light mousy brown,
medium and dark brown
Towhead Whitish blond; usually an ash blond lacking warm tones but not
always
Warm blond Blond with touch of gold and red; whiskey, wheat, honey,
strawberry, brassy, golden etc.
Warm brown Brunette, dark or light brown that contains red or gold tones;
varies from light to nearly black; reddish brown, chestnut, dark amber, auburn etc.
Its impossible to name all the hairstyles but the selection here should be a
good start. Many listed here also are known by other names.
Afro Unisex style borrowed from the African Americans; short and very
curly, forming a bowl shaped profile; a pick is used to pull the hair away from the
head and shape it
Asymmetric Hair is cut long on side of the head and short on the other.
Bedhead Popularized in 1990s by starlet Meg Ryan; short to mid-length
shaggy cut worn jelled or moussed in tossed fashion
Beehive A 60s French twist coiled at the back of the head and rising above
it to form a cone shape (see upsweep)
Bob Introduced in 1915 this short cropped hair style was popular during the
1920s; also called the shingle bob, the shingle, the Eaton crop. It is often cropped
at the jawline and aligned close to the face.
Bowl Most commonly worn by young boys. The bang area cut straight cross
the forehead as if measured by turning a bowl upside down on the head. The top
layers are longer and cut along the this bowl line around the head.
Duck tail 50s style worn by girls and boys alike; hair on either side of nape
combed toward the center of the head; reminiscent of Elvis Presley, Fabian, Doris
Day, Debbie Reynolds etc.
Farraha Fawcett Long layered hair flipped or feathered back off the face
with a bang that feathers or rolls off the face as well; made popular by the TV star
of the same name; late 70s and early 80s
Finger waved Usually short haircut in which a stylist uses lotion and her
fingers to create deep waves that circle the head. Popular in the 1920s and 30s.
Flip Feminine hair style of the 50s and 60s; long hair usually shoulder
length turned up at the ends, sometimes in a roll.
French twist/seam Hair swept back from both sides the head (front to back)
and rolled down the center of the head into a roll or tucked to make a seam
Fringe Curly bangs worn in the 1880s; in 1900s worn straight; alternate
name for bangs
Kiss curls Seen immediately after Civil War; ringlets of curls on the cheeks
or forehead
London Cut Short female cut popular during the 1960s and early 70s. The
hair was cut over the ears, leaving a fringe in front of the ears, often brushed
toward the face or straight down. The nape hair was cut along the hairline like a
boys but more rounded instead of squared off like a mans neckline.
Mohawk Shaved head with a strip of hair growth down the center of the
head from forehead to the nape
Pads Late 1830s long coiled curls over the ears (looked like ear muffs); at
the back of the head they were called a Grecian knot or psyche knot
Pageboy Introduced in late 1930s early 40s; long, hair turned under,
usually just touching the shoulders
Pigtails Same as pony tail only the hair is parted down middle and each
section is cinched into its own tail above or below the ear
Pixie Female short cut; feathered around profile of face and onto cheek,
short at the nape line; usually with full bang and combed forward onto face; also
called an Italian cut; permed version called a poodle cut
Pompadour Style of wearing the hair high over the forehead usually in
some type of rolled affect; in 1940s women used rats (nylon mash) to roll the hair
off the forehead and puff it; a version of this also worn during the 1700s and early
1800s by most and women; name comes from a lady of this era called Madame
Pompadour
Ponytail Hair gathered together and cinched with a rubber band or barrette
to make a tail at the back of the head; worn high or low; worn low its sometimes
called a George (referring to George Washington) or a Paul Revere
Punk Usually short on top and styled with lotion to stand up off the head;
often a mohawk fashion from forehead to nape; sometimes dyed bright neon colors
of pink, purple, blue, orange etc.
Queue Pigtail, esp. that of a Chinese. (Chinese queue was braided) Men of
Colonial America wore these as well, usually tied back with a ribbon and in some
cases men wore a periwig styled with a queue
Sausage curl Long tube-like coils of hair; popular in early 1800s; in the
early 1970s these were piled on top of the head in a cluster, esp. for formal dress
for teens.
Shag Like a pixie, only long at the nape. Lengths vary from short to long
layered cut; popular during the early 70s
Skin heads Group of radical racist youths, men and women alike, who
shaved their heads
Spaniels curls Late 1840s into the 50s; long thick curls worn by the ear
(as worn by Elizabeth Barrette Browning)
Spit curls First seen in 1831; flat curls on women in front of the ear
Updo/upsweep Generic term for long hair styled high on top of head; hair
might petaled (layered curls), barrel curled, arranged in a chignon, backcombed
into a beehive or styled in French roll etc.
Wedge cut Also called Dorothy Hammil cut; short cut worn mostly by
women; sides feathered off the face, back cut longer from the drown to the
occipital bone, where its layered into a wedge; nape is trimmed close the head and
short; a late 70s and early 80s style;