Short Curly Hairstyles Biography
Source(google.com.pk)
When you have super curly hair you usually don't want to go short. Short hair can frizz up on you more easily than long hair and you run the risk of major pouffy hair. The longer your hair, the more your curls will weigh hair down.
That said, the right haircut can work on curly hair. These photos show off several curly hairstyles that work. They all feature long layers and while there is a bit of "pouf" going on in some of the pictures I feel it really works on these women.
If you were born with curly hair, maybe you hate it. You don't like that it frizzes with the first sign of humidity.
You hate that your styling options are limited.
You're afraid to go short because you don't want to look like a poufball on a stick. (Although there are some short hairstyles that look great on curly hair. Check out these).
But the truth is you have AMAZING styling options and yes, you can go shortish (find out your best haircut options here). You can straighten your hair with a flat iron, or Japanese or Brazilian straightening procedures. You can get your hair dry cut into the most gorgeous shoulder-length styles, as seen on Lisa Edelstein here. And you are so lucky because chances are you only have to wash your hair once or twice a week.
Let's focus on the positives, shall we? After all, straight haired women covet your curls. I know this for a fact. I own 4 curling irons.
There are a few secrets to styling curly hair that I've learned over the years. Get the scoop in this article, 10 secrets to styling curly hair.
Approximately ten years ago, Nikki Walton was a Missouri-based college student, balancing her studies and her social life like so many others, discovering deep-rooted things in her subconscious that had always existed but remained undetected. While away at school, Walton enlisted her boyfriend to transport her to and from her trusted hairstylist in St. Louis. This monthly trek entailed a three hour ride down the interstate- all to have her hair washed and “pressed” under scorching heat, ultimately achieving bone straight tresses that lasted a week. “After a year or two of that, my then-boyfriend, now husband, pulled me to the side and said, ‘You’re a Psych major, you should see that this isn’t healthy. Your hair is beautiful no matter how it is, and you should be comfortable with it kinky, curly, or straight,’” Walton recalls, “It was at that time that I had to agree with him.” Today, Nikki is a successful psychotherapist and the most credible online source in regards to natural hair care, maintenance, and decoding psychological ties between black women and their hair.
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