Showing posts with label vintage hair accessories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage hair accessories. Show all posts

November 29, 2011

A beautiful example of 1940s headband inspiration

Day 333 of Vintage 365



Headbands are a marvelous accessory, if you ask me. No doubt due in part to my 1980s and 90s childhood (when they were frequently all the rage - especially in the pre-scrunchie days), I've had a long standing love of headbands. Between grades four and seven in particular, I sported them more days than not to school and amassed a collection of a dozen or more, all of which saw heavy rotation.

By the time high school rolled around and I was actively experimenting with a range of hairstyles (including my first solid attempts at vintage hairdos), headbands took a bit of a back seat, but I certainly still reached for them sometimes.

Hop ahead to my twenties; gone are most of the particular updos and hairstyles I wore as a teen (oh the horrors of some of them!) and instead, nearly every day, I opt for vintage 40s and 50s looks instead. The one main exception to that statement is that I will sometimes wear a ponytail, but even then I try to give it a fun late 50s inspired vibe.

Interestingly, I've found that it's by no means impossible to combine mid-century styles with that beloved childhood hair accessory of mine, headbands.

Now granted, the 30s, 40s, and 50s did not see an abundance of headbands (be they soft fabric or sturdier plastic/metal band styles), however I have encountered some images of gals from those decades looking positively lovely in headbands, such as the elegant blonde who appeared on the July 1945 cover of Cornet magazine pictured below.


{Vintage Cornet magazine cover featuring a sophisticated looking woman, complete with a pretty blue headband, via What Makes the Pie Shops Tick on Flickr.}

 

Here a relatively simple, completely classic curled hairstyle partners with an understated royal blue fabric headband to which a glistening bejewelled pin of a bird (an eagle, if you ask me) has been attached for a delightful dose of unexpected bling.

The wearing of headbands is by no means a twenty-first century novelty, in fact cultures stretching back as far (if not earlier) than the Greeks and Romans used both strips of fabric and wreaths of greenery as headbands.

During the last century however, headbands (generally speaking) didn't really come into major vogue until the Mod looks of the swinging 60s appeared. However prior to that, styles ranging from plain black bands to feather and flower adorned examples did indeed exist, sometimes paired with a wisp of tulle to create a sort of hat/headband combo.

Over the last few days headbands have (like most fashion accessories) waxed and waned in popularity, yet never completely fallen off the radar (in fact in very recent years, due in no small part to a rival in preppy fashions alla Gossip Girl, they've become a hit once more with fashionistas everywhere), and I suspect they're unlikely to ever completely vanish.

Not, of course, that I'd stop wearing them if they did! These days, inspired by images like this beautiful vintage magazine cover, I enjoy wearing headbands with second or third day pin curls, as well as Veronica Lake inspired waves. Sometimes, I'll swap a headband for the more classic bandanna look, and channel my inner WW2 factory worker with a roll or mini pompadour of hair adorned with a cute polka dot (or solid hued) stretch fabric headband.

To all those who enjoy both headbands and vintage 40s/50s hairstyles, yet may have been hesitant to pair the two, I hope that this post helps put your mind at ease and that it inspires you to try pairing these two together for a stylish, completely old school approved look that radiates beauty and timeless charm.



January 12, 2011

Vintage 365: A brief history of, and where to find, hair rats

Day 12 of Vintage 365



With a name that might at first inspire thoughts of pesky vermin (or cute little rodent critters, depending on your personal feelings), “hair rats “ actually have absolutely nothing to do with the four legged creatures they share part of their name with. Instead a hair rat (or hair rat piece, as it is sometimes known) is a a very simple volumizing device that’s tucked under a portion of one's hair to help create volume and lift (and/or a specific shape).

In decades and centuries past (and still sometimes today) hair rats were often made from hair that the wearer (or another person) had shed and collected over time (then commonly fashioned into a nest-like shape). Today however, they are frequently made out of synthetic materials (such as foam) and tend to take the form of either a round doughnut (with or without a whole in the middle), that's handy for creating tidy looking chignons and buns, or a cylinder measuring a few inches long which is very useful for a number of different vintage hairstyles (from rolled faux Bettie bangs to generous sized rolls and curls - such as those worn by the two women in the 1940s photo above - that instantly channel WW2 era beauties such as Betty Grable).

I've noticed over the years on various vintage blogs and forums, that many gals are looking for where to buy hair rats from. Despite living in a big city (Toronto), I haven't chanced upon one myself in any of drug, department, and beauty supply shops I've checked either, so I decided to go hunting for hair rats online (pun intended).

I'm happy to share with all of you that I found a site called "A Discount Beauty" that sells both 6", 8", and 10" long hair rats (including styles with snaps on the end, if you want to create a doughnut shaped rat), that are available in black, brown and beige (pick the colour closest to your current hair shade, so that the rat will be less visible if your hair slips and exposes part of it).

At a nicely budget-friendly $6.25 each (regardless of length/colour), you can easily pick up one or two of these handy-dandy tools to keep in your hairstyling arsenal. Hair rats are oodles of fun to play with and such a help when you want to create tight, generously sized vintage style hair rolls (and who amongst us, doesn’t love those?! Smile).