Showing posts with label Cornrows Hairstyles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cornrows Hairstyles. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.

Nowadays so many types, models, and name of hairstyles. Previously I did not know much about the models hairstyle, arguably the layman. But after I made ​​a website about hair styles, it requires me to know more about the model, name, type, and variety of hair styles before I publish to the reader. Previously, I only focus on one hair style that is often used in childhood, without knowing what the name, type, model, and styles of hair that are used at the time. I think you are experiencing the same thing. I know the different types of the new hair styles through reading and view images in multiple media. Sometimes I also ask my brother in law who has a hair salon about what is the best short hairstyles for men.

Now so easy to get information on the internet. therefore we have to thank Google for sharing something that is useful for all of us. From the internet I learn more about hair styles, short hair style especially. Short hair styles were so many different variations. Previously, sometimes I also do not know if there are short hair styles women use. I therefore encourage all of us to read and see more, so we know how much we lose useful information, especially the hair style that we discussed this. With a lot of reading and seeing, I also know about cornrow hairstyles are very unique. Cornrow hairstyles are also many ways of processing, one of short Cornrow hairstyles for men.

According to the history I know about Cornrow, strands of hair that formed several small braids and frequently used by Africans, especially African-Americans for generations, whether it is used by children, young women, adult women and men. Yes, this is a new experience for me about the hair style that I did not know before. From what I saw on Cornrow hairstyles, braided hair smaller then broken down into a sort of a straight line or a zigzag shape that fills the entire head. It seems very complicated to make, I guess. Several configurations for Cornrow styles can be modified by various other hairstyles. Cornrow hairstyles are the valuable heritage of African Americans. Then I asked if this hairstyles can be used by other than their (African-American?).

Here is a picture of; short Cornrow hair styles for Men. Please try.

Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men - Korean
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men.
Short Cornrow Hairstyles for Men - Asia

Saturday, 24 May 2014

Black Hairsytles | Sophisticate Black Hair Styles and Care Guide | Blog Black Hair Styles

Sexy, wavy, long…That's actress Gabrielle Union's signature style vibe—and she wears it beautifully. But don't think that just because she's got her go-to coif move down that the star doesn't change it up! Here, we take a look back at the Being Mary Jane and Think Like A Man Too star's most memorable on-screen style moments. Do you have a Gabrielle hair-fashion favorite?



In a controversial new regulation characterized as discriminatory, the Army has banned common black hairstyles popular with African-American women, including large cornrows, dreadlocks and twists. The 16 women of the Congressional Black Caucus have asked Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel to overturn the new directive on behalf of the 26,700 black women who are active duty in the Army. Another new Army rule bans tattoos on neck, face, lower arms, hands, and fingers of recruits.

The new hair regulations, whose goal is to make clear the professional look of soldiers, requires that hair be of "uniform dimension, small in diameter (approximately one-four inch), show no more than one-eighth (inch) of the scalp between the braids." Also banned are dreadlocks, including "unkempt" or "matted" braids and cornrows. It is the words "unkempt" and "matted" that indicate racial bias to some African-Americans, as it indicates a lack of understanding of the characteristics of natural, black hair.

Imani Perry, a Princeton University African-American studies professor, states that although it is reasonable for the military to expect some amount of neatness and conformity in hairstyles, those expectations should consider the wide range of natural hair textures that people have. Common black hairstyles such as cornrow braids and dreadlocks are the easiest grooming options for many black women with tightly curly or kinky hair. He goes on to say that female black soldiers are put in a difficult position by the new hair requirements, which are both racially biased and unfair.

Critics say the new regulations are among grooming standards intended to help reduce the size of the army from 570,000 to 420,000. Loren B. Thompson, a Lexington Institute military expert says that during wartime there is a tendency to allow more variation in personal style simply because there are more important things to worry about.

The rules on tattoos are also criticized, especially since they have become popular among soldiers who are deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, but it is the Army's ban on common black hairstyles such as cornrows and twists that have raised charges of racism. More than 17,000 people have signed an online petition to the White House, asking that the hair regulations be overturned.

In addition to a lack of understanding of the characteristics of black hair, critics say that the regulation uses the hair of white women as its baseline, which rules out common black hairstyles. The texture of black hair, much of which is very curly, makes it difficult to meet the regulations unless it is chemically straightened, a particular problem when the women are deployed since the hair products necessary to maintain straightened hair are expensive and difficult to get, especially in Afghanistan.

Sgt. Jasmine Jacobs, the woman who started the petition to the White House, says she was deployed to Iraq in 2008 and 2009 with a woman who had to keep redoing her cornrows to keep them neat enough to meet the current Army regulations. She says the woman's hairline had receded an inch by the time they returned to the states.

The Army insists that the new regulations were cleared by a focus group that included black women. An Army spokeswoman, Lt. Col. Alayne P. Conway, says that the new female hair standards were developed with the involvement of African-American female soldiers. The Army's senior female soldiers involved in the decision-making process banning cornrows, twists, and other common black hairstyles were considered a representative sample of Army populations.

By Beth A. Balen