Monday, March 31, 2014

North Korea's 'buzzcut' strategy not new



Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION





WASHINGTON - Listen up, depraved youth of North Korea: Your long-haired revolution is officially over.

According to Radio Free Asia, the North Korean government has introduced guidelines mandating all male university students get the same haircut as Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un -- a tight fade on the sides and an awkward middle part on a floppy cut up top. The decree was reportedly issued in the capital, Pyongyang, two weeks ago and is now being implemented nationwide.

As with most stories out of the Hermit Kingdom, these latest claims about North Korean fashion come thinly sourced. The story may very well be false - its veracity has already been called into question. But if true, it wouldn't be the first time the government has sought to impose restrictions on hairstyles. Last year, the regime outlined 28 acceptable cuts - 10 for men and 18 for women - that were showcased in framed photos in hair salons in Pyongyang. And in 2005, North Korea launched a crusade against long hair. A media campaign declaring "let us trim our hair in accordance with Socialist lifestyle" urged men to shear based on "the demands of the military-first era." Hair, wrote Minju Choson, a government daily, is a "very important issue that shows the people's cultural standards and mental and moral state."

In the magnitude of its depression and deplorable human rights record, North Korea is unique; in its alleged strategy of social control by buzzcut, it is not. In fact, authoritarian regimes around the world have for centuries imposed their political will by regulating men's locks.

After the Manchus conquered China in the 1640s, the empire's new rulers issued an edict forcing all adult men to shave the front of their head and tie the remaining hair in a queue, a long braided ponytail. The rule was imposed under penalty of death. The edict, former American diplomat Edward Earl Rice writes in his book, Mao's Way, reminded the "Chinese of their subordination to Manchu rule." From the conquerors' perspective, "the command to cut one's hair or lose one's head not only brought rulers and subjects together into a single physical resemblance; it also provided them with a perfect loyalty test," the historian Frederic Wakeman notes in his book about the Manchu conquest.

Around the same time in Russia, Peter the Great attempted to stamp out beards, which he viewed as a hopeless relic of his country's past. Hoping to modernize Russia in the mold of the West, he imposed a beard tax. Individuals who paid the tariff were given a copper token inscribed with the motto: "The beard is a useless burden."

Several centuries later, during the 1970s, Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha did away with such free-market methods and outlawed beards all together. Saparmurat Niyazov, the former president of Turkmenistan, mimicked this crackdown on personal freedom when he appeared on television in February 2004 to decree that young men could no longer grow out their hair or beards.

Elsewhere in the world, decrees governing grooming have often been issued in the name of Islam. After the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 1996, they required men to wear beards in accordance with with the militants' harsh interpretation of Sharia law. In 2010, Islamic militants in Somalia ordered men in the capital of Mogadishu to leave beards untrimmed.

Iran's clerics imposed their own brand of religiously motivated restrictions in 2010: Ponytails and mullets were out, in favor of tightly-coiffed crew-cuts and side-parts. "The proposed styles are inspired by Iranians' complexion, culture and religion, and Islamic law," said Jaleh Khodayar, the director of Iran's Veil and Chastity Day festival. Hair gel was permitted, but only in modest quantities.

Regardless of religion, authoritarians don't seem to have much love for hippies. After overthrowing Greece's elected government in a 1967 military coup, strongman Georgios Papadopoulos banned "decadent" long hair for men and mini-skirts for women. During the 1970s, Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew denied some foreigners entry into Singapore if their hair was too long. Young people without a clean cut, as Alex Josey writes in his book Lee Kuan Yew: The Crucial Years, "are not employed as caddies at the golf courses where Lee swings his clubs."

Power: Sometimes it grows from a barber's clippers.

-Foreign Policy



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READ MORE - North Korea's 'buzzcut' strategy not new

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Tell Us: Which Wedding Hairstyle Ideas are You Dying to DIY? We'll Try 'Em For ...







So, ladies, my first wedding of the 2014 wedding season is next week. I'll just be a guest, not a bridesmaid, but naturally I still plan to use the occasion to test out a wedding hairstyle for you guys (a la the Taylor Swift braided bun I once copied in 15 minutes in a hotel bathroom). While I'm at it, I'm also going to have my sister in law Jessica test a different hairstyle for you, because her hair is much longer and thicker than mine, and she's going to the same wedding. And because a beauty blogger's relative's job is never done.

So here's what we need to do today: Tell me, when you think about the weddings on your calendars this spring/summer, what hairstyle ideas pop into your mind? Is there something you've seen on celebrities or on Pinterest lately that you're dying to DIY?

Here are a few options to get you started. Jess was thinking about wearing her hair wavy and pushed all to one side. That's such a fun trend, right?



But part of me wants to force her to try Jessica Alba's glam Met Gala braided topknot instead (I don't think my hair's long enough).





Or, this longtime favorite hairstyle idea in my "files" would look SO pretty on her.



As for me: My hair's shoulder-length, so some kind of mini-updo would be fun. My dress is light blue and lacy-girly.

Maybe something with a cute little bump in back?



Or-not to trot out Jessica Alba again-this soft updo?

But we're totally open to ideas! So let me know: Which hairstyles should we try out for you next week? Post your descriptions and/or links below, and we'll pick our favorites to feature here soon! Photos: Getty Images

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READ MORE - Tell Us: Which Wedding Hairstyle Ideas are You Dying to DIY? We'll Try 'Em For ...

Friday, March 28, 2014

North Korea not forcing 'Dear Leader' haircuts, say experts



North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's distinctive hairstyle is the do of the day on the internet, thanks to a viral report that every male university student in the capital is now under orders to get a buzz just like it. But it appears the barbers of Pyongyang aren't exactly sharpening their scissors.

Recent visitors to the country say they've seen no evidence of any mass haircutting. North Korea watchers smell another imaginative but uncorroborated rumour.

The thinly sourced reports say an order went out a few weeks ago for university students to buzz cut the sides of their heads just like Kim. Washington, D.C.-based Radio Free Asia cited unnamed sources as saying an unwritten directive from somewhere within the ruling Workers' Party went out early this month, causing consternation among students who didn't think the new hairdo would suit them.

"I was there just a few days ago, and no sign of that," said Simon Cockerell of Koryo Tours, which specializes in bringing foreign tourists to North Korea. "It's definitely not true."

An AP journalist in Pyongyang also said he had not seen any recent changes in hairstyles among college students in the capital.

The report gave rise to the Twitter hashtag #DearLeaderHaircut, a reference to the nickname often ascribed to both Kim and his father, the late Kim Jong-il, who was also known for his one-of-a-kind bouffant.

Wide interest in the reports reflect the fascination the outside world has had with the unique hairstyles of both Kims.

Though the forced grooming story may be one of many reported oddities about North Korea life that turn out to be false, it is true that the government has its own "fashion police."



​Choe Cheong-ha, a defector who left North Korea in 2004, said members of a government-run youth organization routinely check for people who are not dressed appropriately. He said they look for whether people are wearing the mandatory lapel pins with the images of former leaders Kim-il Sung and Kim Jong-il, or for violations such as blue jeans, clothes with English words or above-the-knee dresses.

But Choe said directives on hairstyles weren't much of an issue, since most people voluntarily keep their hair neat and conservatively styled.

In 2005, however, the government waged war against men with long hair, calling them unhygienic anti-socialist fools and directing them to wear their hair "socialist style." It derided shabbily coiffed men as "blind followers of bourgeois lifestyle." The country's state-run Central TV even identified violators by name and address, exposing them to jeers from other citizens.

The hair campaign, dubbed "Let's trim our hair according to socialist lifestyle," required that hair be kept no longer than five centimetres. Older men received a small exemption to allow comb-overs.

The campaign claimed long hair hampers brain activity by taking oxygen away from nerves in the head. It didn't explain why women were allowed to grow long hair.

With women's hair, too, there have been misperceptions.

Photos of suggested hairstyles posted outside women's hair salons - the kind that allow a customer to show her hairdresser what she wants - are regularly depicted by foreign media as showing the only sanctioned styles North Korean women can choose from.

Not true. But don't tell that to the internet.

Kim Jong-Un forces all male students in North Korea to get the same haircut as him http://t.co/TIRtViQhJt- Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) March 26, 2014

Important info to share: cbcasithappens: Here's how to cut your hair like Kim Jong-un http://t.co/wLZ7Asvi3l http://ift.tt/1hE0cKW As It Happens (@cbcasithappens) March 27, 2014

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READ MORE - North Korea not forcing 'Dear Leader' haircuts, say experts

Mass Kim Jong





Model of good hair ... despite the online rumours, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has apparently not ordered students to get his buzz cut, but long hair is publicly chastised. Photo: AP

Tokyo: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's distinctive hairstyle is the 'do of the day on the internet, thanks to a viral report that every male university student in the capital is now under orders to get a buzz just like it. But it appears the barbers of Pyongyang aren't exactly sharpening their scissors.

Recent visitors to the country say they've seen no evidence of any mass haircutting. North Korea watchers smell another imaginative but uncorroborated rumour.

The thinly sourced reports say an order went out a few weeks ago for university students to buzz cut the sides of their heads just like Kim. Washington, DC-based Radio Free Asia cited unnamed sources as saying an unwritten directive from somewhere within the ruling Workers' Party went out early this month, causing consternation among students who didn't think the new 'do would suit them.



Not a single bourgeois ponytail in sight ...North Korean leader Kim Jong Un poses for a photo with some of his followers. Photo: Reuters

"I was there just a few days ago, and no sign of that," said Simon Cockerell of Koryo Tours, which specialises in bringing foreign tourists to North Korea. "It's definitely not true."

An AP journalist in Pyongyang also said he had not seen any recent changes in hairstyles among college students in the capital.

Wide interest in the reports reflect the fascination the outside world has had with the unique hairstyles of both Kim Jong-un and his father, the late Kim Jong Il, who had a one-of-a-kind bouffant.

Though the forced grooming story may be one of many reported oddities about North Korea life that turn out to be false, it is true that the government has its own "fashion police."

Choe Cheong-ha, a defector who left North Korea in 2004, said members of a government-run youth organisation routinely check for people who are not dressed appropriately. He said they look for whether people are wearing the mandatory lapel pins with the images of former leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, or for violations such as blue jeans, clothes with English words or above-the-knee dresses.

But Choe said directives on hairstyles weren't much of an issue, since most people voluntarily keep their hair neat and conservatively styled.

In 2005, however, the government waged war against men with long hair, calling them unhygienic anti-socialist fools and directing them to wear their hair "socialist style." It derided shabbily coifed men as "blind followers of bourgeois lifestyle." The country's state-run Central TV even identified violators by name and address, exposing them to jeers from other citizens.

The hair campaign, dubbed "Let's trim our hair according to socialist lifestyle," required that hair be kept no longer than 5 centimetres. Older men received a small exemption to allow comb-overs.

The campaign claimed long hair hampers brain activity by taking oxygen away from nerves in the head. It didn't explain why women were allowed to grow long hair.

With women's hair, too, there have been misperceptions.

Photos of suggested hairstyles posted outside women's hair salons - the kind allow a customer to show her hairdresser what she wants - are regularly depicted by foreign media as showing the only sanctioned styles North Korean women can choose from.

Not true. But don't tell that to the internet. AP

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READ MORE - Mass Kim Jong

3 Hairstyles That Prove Anne Hathaway Is Going to Grow Out Her Pixie With No ...







Anne Hathaway appears to be growing out the pixie cut she's had for a while now, and in typical pulled-together Anne H. fashion, she's doing it without a hint of transitional- hair-length awkwardness (thanks to her hairstylist, the amazing Adir Abergel).

Here are a few of the different ways she's styled her growing-out cut while out promoting her film Rio 2 this week.

1. Poufed in the front, pushed to the side, then secured with a gorgeous floral clip.



2. With sexy bangs dramatically swept to one side and spiked in texture.



3. Twisted back in rows, for an updo-like effect, and topped with a stunning necklace-like star headband (as Beth showed you a peek of on Friday).

Are any of you growing out a short haircut right now? What are your favorite styling tricks during the awkward in-between phase? Photos: Getty Images

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We didn't think the day would come when we would be physically moved by just a hairstyle. How wrong we were. Nigerian photographer JD 'Okhai Ojeikere documented the stunningly experimental coifs of Nigerian women in his series aptly titled "Hairstyles." The results are nothing short of visually hypnotic.

Capturing the intersection of cultural tradition and personal expression, Ojeikere's photographs show what happens when personal style bleeds into the realm of art. Thanks to an onslaught of coiling curls, gravity-defying braids and zig-zagging parts, the women's hairstyles featured in his images become living sculptures. Some stand up on their own while others incorporate thread to achieve their remarkably independent shapes. Captured from behind in minimalist black and white, Ojeikere's images read far more like avant-garde artworks than hairspiration. Without ever showing his subjects' faces, he creates a striking portrait of Nigerian beauty.

Ojeikere, who was born in 1930, passed away in February of this year, though his imagery remains as vibrant as ever. See a sample of his striking portraits below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

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North Korean men must get Kim Jong Un's haircut



The hottest men's hairstyle in North Korea is shear madness.

Supreme Leader Kim Jong-Un, in a bizarre bit of tonsorial tyranny, decreed that his 12 million countrymen adopt his decidedly retro high-and-tight 'do.

The diminutive despot delivered his "fashion guideline" about two weeks ago, likely ensuring that Dennis Rodman and his multi-hued mop will never return to the nation.

The "Un and only" haircut, once popularized by '90s boy bands, was unimaginatively dubbed "The Dear Leader Kim Jong-Un" - more of a mouthful than "a little off the sides."

The 31-year-old's look is simple: Short and slicked back on top, buzzed to the skin above both ears.

North Korea's citizens were not too keen on the government-ordered grooming, griping that it's not the right look for everyone.



AP Photo/KRT

"Our leader's haircut is very particular, if you will," one source told the Korea Times. "It doesn't always go with everyone since everyone has different face and head shapes."

While North Korean men wigged out over the above-the-ears edict, word of the state-sanctioned styling caused barely a ripple in New York.

"It's a classic fade haircut," said Igor Iskiyev, owner of Clean Cuts in the East Village. "It works for Kim Jong-Un because his face is so big."

Iskiyev said he can give the same cut to anyone in about 10 minutes, for his standard price of $15.

Despite his reputation as a cartoonish, hyper-violent buffoon, Kim Jong-Un's cut is not completely outdated, said Adel Chabbi, who sports a similar coiffure.

Yet Chabbi acknowledges the look is on the way out in favor of cuts with more body and texture on the sides.

At Chabbi's Adel Atelier Salon on the Lower East Side, customers often come in with iPhone photos of hairstyles they want.

"Nobody ever came in with a photo of Kim Jong-Un," he said. "If they did, I wouldn't be so excited."

The shaved sides would mean something very specific on the streets of New York City - and it's not a celebration of police-state socialism.

"If most people got that cut," said Iskiyev, "they would just look like a hipster."

lmcshane@nydailynews.com

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Thursday, March 20, 2014

Emma Watson: Get the hairstyle



Emma Watson proved she keeps up with the latest trends during her last red carpet appearance, with a deep side parting hairstyle at the Noah Madrid premiere.

We've already spoken about our love for her sexy masculine style, and now we move onto the hair.

The British actress chose a look that we spotted at numerous shows, namely the AW14 collection from Lucas Nascimento.

In February, ghd creative director, Kenna, led the ghd art team backstage at Lucas Nascimento to craft a 70s noir girl for the catwalk: 'A side parting from the 40s with the one-sided width of the 70s!'

As seen on the models walking at the LFW show, Emma Watson also sported a sleek, pulled-back side, which provided a sexy, peek-a-boo effect.



"The ghd eclipse styler was the key styling tool to create the width and raw edges seen in this look. My top tip to recreate this modern twist to such a classic hairstyle is no volume at the root; push the volume to the ends of your hair to give the look 'width' instead. It's a more modern silhouette, as Emma has done," explains Kenna, ghd UK creative director.

Now you can get the hairstyle too with these helpful tips:


Prep: To create a textured base apply a root lift hairspray to wet hair

Blast the hair dry with a hairdryer.

Make a wide side parting on the right hand side of the head with the comb and follow it down the curve of the head to the nape.

Brush this smaller section of hair flat using and lightly spray with hairspray. Tie this section of hair back with an elastic band.

Section the rest of the hair to the left. Using the ghd eclipse, create soft wide 70s style waves by taking 2 inch sections of the hair and placing the styler in at the root, bottom up, close to the head.

Rotate the styler 180 degrees clockwise pushing the hair down and diagonally a few centimetres, then rotating anticlockwise by 180 degrees - repeating to the ends. This will get width in the silhouette.

Brush out with a paddle brush to break the waves and put distance between each hair, creating width and an "airy" texture.

Top tip: To soften the grooves take the hair in two sections, top and bottom, and blow dry on a slow and medium heat with a hairdryer and use a paddle brush to go through.

To finish the look gently mist the hair with your favourite strong hold hairspray to ensure your look stays in place all night.

by Taryn Davies for http://ift.tt/16S7MNu find me on

and follow me on











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READ MORE - Emma Watson: Get the hairstyle

Emma Watson: Get the hairstyle



Emma Watson proved she keeps up with the latest trends during her last red carpet appearance, with a deep side parting hairstyle at the Noah Madrid premiere.

We've already spoken about our love for her sexy masculine style, and now we move onto the hair.

The British actress chose a look that we spotted at numerous shows, namely the AW14 collection from Lucas Nascimento.

In February, ghd creative director, Kenna, led the ghd art team backstage at Lucas Nascimento to craft a 70s noir girl for the catwalk: 'A side parting from the 40s with the one-sided width of the 70s!'

As seen on the models walking at the LFW show, Emma Watson also sported a sleek, pulled-back side, which provided a sexy, peek-a-boo effect.



"The ghd eclipse styler was the key styling tool to create the width and raw edges seen in this look. My top tip to recreate this modern twist to such a classic hairstyle is no volume at the root; push the volume to the ends of your hair to give the look 'width' instead. It's a more modern silhouette, as Emma has done," explains Kenna, ghd UK creative director.

Now you can get the hairstyle too with these helpful tips:


Prep: To create a textured base apply a root lift hairspray to wet hair

Blast the hair dry with a hairdryer.

Make a wide side parting on the right hand side of the head with the comb and follow it down the curve of the head to the nape.

Brush this smaller section of hair flat using and lightly spray with hairspray. Tie this section of hair back with an elastic band.

Section the rest of the hair to the left. Using the ghd eclipse, create soft wide 70s style waves by taking 2 inch sections of the hair and placing the styler in at the root, bottom up, close to the head.

Rotate the styler 180 degrees clockwise pushing the hair down and diagonally a few centimetres, then rotating anticlockwise by 180 degrees - repeating to the ends. This will get width in the silhouette.

Brush out with a paddle brush to break the waves and put distance between each hair, creating width and an "airy" texture.

Top tip: To soften the grooves take the hair in two sections, top and bottom, and blow dry on a slow and medium heat with a hairdryer and use a paddle brush to go through.

To finish the look gently mist the hair with your favourite strong hold hairspray to ensure your look stays in place all night.

by Taryn Davies for http://ift.tt/16S7MNu find me on

and follow me on











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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

L'Oreal Paris Launches The Advanced



March 18th, 2014 - 8:17 am | Posted by Jasmine Washington

hairstylecollection.jpg" width="100%"/>

With hundreds of products on the haircare market, discovering a collection that helps achieve a specific hairstyle is usually easier said than done. Most products are said to provide one thing and depending on your hair texture or some other circumstance, they often result in another.

L'Oreal Paris recently launched the Advanced Hairstyle Collection to provide Juicy ladies with 14-products that help achieve and maintain five popular hairstyling techniques.

Providing maximum hold with Lock It, volume with Boost It, smoothness with Sleek It, curls with Curve It and texture with Txt It, L'Oreal Paris' new collection ensures that not only will Juicy ladies achieve the style they desire but they can also expect great hold and longevity with their style.

Infused with a Fibralock technology, composed of micronized styling polymers, the Advanced Hairstyle Collection creates a "holding matrix," that locks styles in strand by strand.

Click here to learn more on L'Oreal Paris' Advanced Hairstyle Collection and tell us which products you're interested in trying out.



Jasmine Washington Jasmine Washington is a lover of all things natural hair and beauty. Located in the heart of the city that never sleeps, Washington has dreams of writing her way to the top. Follow her @Its_Just_Jas

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Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Blake Lively Wore This Ponytail on a Movie Set But You're Going to Want to ...







Knowing that you ladies are always in the market for an easy way to pretty up your ponytail, I just had to pass along this photo of Blake Lively on the set of her upcoming film Age of Adaline in Vancouver yesterday.



This low pony has twists that resemble 1940s "victory rolls"-a hairstyle many of our grandmothers wore. We've seen rolled hairstyles like this around quite a bit lately (I have a separate Pinterest board for them!) and I think the idea is so classic and beautiful. The trick to pinning rolls and twists in place: Make an "X" with two bobby pins, instead of using just one at a time, and be sure to slide them in with the jagged part against your scalp-opposite to what most people think. Would you wear a rolled ponytail hairstyle like Blake Lively's? Photos: Splash News

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Rihanna Drake Dating 2014: RiRi Rocks New Hairstyle; Yay or Nay? [Poll]



First Posted: Mar 18, 2014 04:22 AM EDT



Rihanna has one of those faces that look good in any outfit, or in this case, any hairstyle. The "Rude Boy" singer was spotted by Reveal UK on Sunday night showing off her long hair and trimmed belly in a white crop top and slashed jeans.

Rihanna looked fierce in bright red lipstick, sexy heeled-boots, and hoop-earrings. To see more photos of Rihanna's new hair stepping up and around New York, see the Daily Mail's photos.

Riri stepped out on Monday giving the world a first look at her new long hair up-do. According to Entertainment Wise, the 26-year-old turned heads with her last sleek shoulder-length bob but now it has changed again and it's looking good. All eyes were on the rumored girlfriend of singer Drake as she walked around the Big Apple dressed in an all-black ensemble with a sleek ponytail.

The Barbados beauty has been stalked with rumors of an on-going exclusive romance with rapper Drake as they spent most of last month together enjoying the party scene in Europe.

Reveal writes that the pair were sighted dining together in London, bowling at an alley in Manchester, and drinking together at a Manchester bar. During this time, RiRi and Drake treated Parisians to a duet on stage which was described by many as highly sexual and flirtatious. Aside from these little dates, the couple was also seen together in Amsterdam and Germany sending romantic rumors flying.

While the world waits for the official comment of Drake and Rihanna, so far the camps of both artists have remained mum on the topic and made no comments at all.

To see the pair making sweet music together, here's a little throw back of Rihanna's song "What's My Name? Ft. Drake." Listen and see how the chemistry of the pair just works:



What's your take on Rihanna's new do?

TagsRihanna, rihanna and drake, rihanna and drake romance, Rihanna update, rihanna dating drake, hairstyle, Drake, Chris Brown

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Spring/Summer 2014: 10 Easy



Sara Mccorquodale Editor

One of the most effective ways to herald the new season is by changing your hair. Buying a whole new wardrobe might be an impossibility, but a new hairstyle usually costs less and still makes a gloriously big impact.

However, that doesn't always mean chopping off all your locks (it's scary - we get it) - mastering a new style can be a shortcut to a fresher look instantly and easily.

Luckily, many looks from the Spring/Summer 2014 shows were incredibly sleek and simple. From the smooth ponytails at J.W. Anderson to Roksanda Ilincic's oversized structured bows, here's 10 easy-to-copy catwalk looks to bring your hair into the new season.

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Saturday, March 15, 2014

Allow Allison Williams to Demonstrate What We Mean When We Say "Beachy ...







There are a few different categories of waves: Sleek, structured, romantic, and beachy. The hairstyle Allison Williams wore to the Television Academy Presents An Evening With Girls event last night would qualify as "beachy." hairstyle-w724.jpg" width="100%"/>



Why? Well, the waves aren't uniform-they're kind of messy and haphazard, like a combination of wind and salt water might have created them while she was taking a walk along the sands. And they're more "S" shaped than true spirals (aka curling-iron-shaped). Put these elements together and you hit "beachy."

So now you know the true definition of the word-but there's more to learn from Williams. Check out our video of her below to find out her advice on how to handle tricky situations with your best friends. Photos: Getty Images

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The Good, The Bad, And The Bowl Cut: K







Many might often mock the infamous bowl haircut, yet it was an important hairstyle that goes way back. Largely due to popular culture in today's world, this hairstyle has seen a steady rise in its mainstream acceptance.

More often than not, getting a bowl haircut would mean three things - either it was 1. Awesome 2. Awkward or 3. It was done by accident.

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In K-Pop, we have seen the interesting bowl hairstyle on both genders. This becomes rather reminiscent of the men and women living in the Orinoco-Amazon Basin, where traditionally both genders have worn their hair likened to a bowl shape.

Interesting to note also, this hairstyle had in fact adopted its name from being achieved by literally, placing a bowl on one's head as a guide.

The bowl cut had experienced a resurgence of popularity in the 1960s when popular British rock group The Beatles introduced a modern version of bowl-cropped hair, which later came to revolutionize men's hairstyles around the world.



If one were not new to the K-Pop industry, one would already have been exposed to a staggering number of celebrities sporting the "mushroom" or bowl cut hairstyle.

This hairdo has been interpreted by many K-Pop idol groups, more noticeably the boy groups. Perhaps this is not seen as appealing on girls than on guys?

Also, interestingly, the hairstyle that may seem silly or even downright repulsive at first sight, complements the features and face shapes of the K-Idols and render them an effortlessly adorable and cute outlook. This is especially effective in the cute-obsessed K-Pop industry where pretty and cute-looking concepts for guys reigns king.



K-Pop has successfully presented many tasteful versions of the once traditional bowl haircut. This has proven not only to be evidently popular nowadays, but is also deemed a fashion statement.

Fashion magazines like DAZED (and confused) and Elle in Korea have featured K-Pop celebrities in flawlessly neat-looking bowl haircuts.

Such photo shoots are also done in a manner very typical of high fashion shoots - further promoting a chic yet endearing side to the bowl hairstyle.



Surely, the bowl haircut has come a long way and seems to hold a steady foot in the world of K-Pop. In the near future, we can also expect many more interesting permutations of this haircut, which was previously perceived as a very "simple" hairstyle.

It seems like the very nature of such an odd haircut also defies the impeccable styling and physical image of a celebrity and hence - works in way such that fans only find them more endearing and charming.

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Friday, March 14, 2014

Following Cheryl Cole's Lead? Cher Lloyd Debuts New Ombre Hairstyle (PHOTO)

It seems the influence of former mentor Cheryl Cole is still strong in Cher Lloyd - as the star has unveiled a beautiful new ombre look ahead of her appearance on Demi Lovato's Neon Lights tour.

The hair revamp comes just days after Cheryl was seen showcasing a similar look as she rocked up to an X Factor press conference, after it was confirmed that she will rejoin Simon Cowell on the show's judging panel later this year.

Cher Lloyd's new hair (Photo: Instagram)

Cher was considered something of a Cheryl mini-me throughout her time on the competition in 2010, but the pair's relationship since has been a little up-in-the-air following an autotune dig the 'Swagger Jagger' singer made a couple of years ago.

But back in the present, Cher will be supporting Demi, with whom she collaborates on the song 'Really Don't Care', from March 20 in Columbus; taking over from her previous warm-up act Little Mix.

Cheryl Cole earlier this week (WENN)

It's a generally busy time for the newlywed, as she's also slated to premiere her new single 'Sirens' today; six months after her last cut 'I Wish' stammered to a halt outside the Top 100 on the US Billboard charts.

The tune will be the latest to come from her upcoming second LP Sorry I'm Late, which is set for release in May.

Cher hasn't always won at hair in the past (WENN)



She told Billboard recently of the new music: "I think it has two meanings. It's been a long time since I've actually done anything new, but for me, it's as a person.

"I mean, I've spent a whole lot of time trying to figure out who I am, and I think everybody goes through that."

It's been a quiet few months for the usually outspoken singer, who was last in the headlines when she secretly married her boyfriend Craig Monk in November 2013; almost two years after they became engaged.

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Must have hairstyle 2014: Dentele









There's a new hairstyle trend in the world of fringes! After being featured on the catwalks in Paris, the covers of Vogue and being flaunted by top models Suki Waterhouse and Edie Campbell, Dentele has become a must-have look for many style divas.

Hairdresser Karine Jackson has called Dentele as one of the latest trends in the world of hairstyling.

"The Dentele is the fringe of the season- the fringe within a fringe. It's effectively two fringes incorporating a shorter, choppy fringe with longer pieces spliced in between to give the Hair volume, body, texture and shape," femalefirst.co.uk quoted Jackson as saying.



"You can really personalise this fringe as it works at any length from an above the eyebrow cut to an eyelash skimming version," the expert added.

If you're worried that this is a bold look that won't suit you -- well, fear not.

Jackson explains: "Because of the varied lengths of this style, it's great for those who want a little more action in their hair without opting for anything too dramatic.

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