Prom Hair Styles
Tips
For Selecting A Style.
What
Category?
What
one person perceives
as 'short' varies greatly
with another person.
Our breakdown is as
follows:
VERY
SHORT: The weight line
of the hair is at or
above the ear line.
SHORT:
The cut line is between
the ear and the jaw
line.
MEDIUM:
The weight line is between
the jaw and the shoulder.
LONG:
Below the shoulder.
FUNKY:
All sizes, shapes and
lengths, ranging from
the chic to the crazy.
If
you think you would
like a 'short' style',
you should bracket and
also look at all of
the 'very short' and
'medium' styles as the
differences are at times
slight.
Ignore
the age, race, size
and hair color of the
model. Most styles will
fit any age group and
hair color is an easy
adjustment. Don't let
these be a tool to narrow
your list of potential
styles or cuts.
prom
hair style, prom hairstyle,
prom hair
Face
Matching:
The
mathematical rules for
selecting a style to
match your face are
complicated. Some easy
rules of thumb are these:
WEIGHT
OR CUT LINE: At some
point most cuts have
a sharp line or accent
line. Be sure this line
is at your best feature
as the viewers eye will
naturally focus on that
spot. Make doubly sure
that line or accent
doesn't point to your
worst feature. If your
nose is somewhat generous,
you don't want people
focused on it.
LENGTH:
Many women wear long
hair because their significant
other demands it, or
because the female is
insecure and hides behind
her hair. Both of these
reasons suck. You should
wear the hair style
'best' suited to you,
and as long as you are
hiding behind your hair,
your confidence level
can't increase and will
therefor affect your
earnings and success
in life.
Far
too many women wear
long hair far too late
in life. It makes them
look older, not younger.
Most
women finally hack their
hair off the same day
they file for divorce.
Interesting side note
don't you think.
Long
hair is fine and can
even look beautiful,
just make sure you keep
it long for the right
reasons and that it
makes you look great.
COLOR
and CURL: If you are
a brunette and want
to have platinum hair,
you might as well forget
it. It most cases it
can't be done, and in
the few cases where
it can be bleached often
enough over the course
of several days, your
hair is shot and will
soon be gone.
Color
should be compatible
with your skin tone,
and accent your eyes.
If there is a red tint
to your skin, red hair
will not be flattering
and does not work well
with brown eyes either.
Stick
within your race. Blonde
hair on a black or asian
woman looks as dumb
as corn rows on a pasty
white girl. Celebrate
your cultural difference,
its much sexier.
Surrender
to the natural laws
of chemistry and biology.
Some hair types just
will not curl no matter
how often it is permed
and some curl is likely
to remain no matter
how many relaxers are
put on. Live within
these limits or you
will cause yourself
much grief.
CELEBS,
MODELS AND MAINTENANCE:
ALL HAIR requires some
degree of maintenance
and some require more
than others. Make sure
your hair style fits
your life style. A Meg
Ryan cut only looks
good on Meg Ryan and
even if your stylist
has the talent to give
you the same cut, you
are still not going
to look like Meg Ryan,
in fact, you may look
downright silly with
the same cut. Be yourself,
and getting the cut
that looks best on you,
will make you MUCH more
attractive than some
celeb knock off.
If
you absolutely must
have the celeb cut,
here are a few things
to keep in mind:
1.
Remember which movie.
There are many Meg Ryan
hair cuts over the years
and if you and your
stylist are not on the
same page it is not
going to be the most
rewarding experience
of your life.
2.
What you saw Meg Ryan
wearing in the movie
is backed with an army
of the most talented
stylists in the world
that are touching her
hair up EVERY FEW MINUTES.
Trust me, I have worked
on these sets. Unless
you can command the
same level of attention
for your hair, it is
not going to work.
3.
The same goes for hair
styles on models. When
you see them off location
you will hardly recognize
them. Some are down
right ugly and plain.
Added to the time and
talent spent for a shoot,
before the picture made
the cover it went to
a touch-up artist who
spent about \$10,000
getting that picture
ready by removing every
stray hair and covering
every skin blemish and
wrinkle.
YOUR
STYLIST: Last but most
important, find a good
stylist. If you spend
\$9.95 on a cut you
are likely to get your
money's worth. Few stylists
are really good, so
hunt them out. If you
need some hints about
discovering a good stylist
you may want to read,
'How To Find A Good
Stylist.'
Well,
that should about do
it. Armed with this
knowledge you can now
go through the site
with a much higher degree
of success of finding
the new style for you.
An
article from Hair-Styles.org
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