#historical hairstyling
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Wow! This is a really impressive collection of images of women in those bonkers bananas hair styles of roughly 1825 - 1835. Magnificent!
I am fascinated by the sleek close-to-the-head styles, especially ones with little snail-coils of braids n stuff. I also appreciate the asymmetry in most of these styles. Very artistic!
I suspect that most of these are augmented with false curls, braids, and extra hair bits. Even the healthiest head of hair doesn't necessarily have the length or volume for this sort of sculpting without extensions of some kind.
These are brilliant pieces of living sculpture. The people who made them were true artists.
There's something wonderful about these explosive, assertive, creative pre-Victorian efflorescences.
Hairstyles and hats, ca. 1830: part 1
Another gigantic fashion post today.
Hair, hair, hair. Let’s talk about hair. It’s such an important marker of beauty in any given period, for men as well but especially for women. I always figured this is why historical movies can be so reluctant to portray women in period hairstyles if those hairstyles happen to conflict with modern standards of beauty. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen a period flick and been so impressed with the work of the costume designer, only to have their meticulous efforts spoiled by the shoddy hair and makeup design.
^^^Yep, you too, Les Mis movie. What is with this hair??? My modern eyes say, “hey, it’s cute,” and my 1830s eyes say, “wtf is this bedhead? put your hair up, girl!”
This seems to be a thing for actresses more than actors, and I don’t know whether it’s the actresses who demand that they not be “uglied” up, or the director, or the hair designer him/herself, but whoever it is needs to grow up and realize that hot women will still be hot in 1830s sausage curls and apollo knots, and hot men will still be hot in mutton chops and under-the-chin beards. Sorry, /end rant. But really, movie industry, can we get on this?
So, ca. 1830 ladies’ hair. The most stereotypical image of this period’s hairstyles is the ringlets on the sides and the coiffure à la chinoise up the back, garnished with all kinds of wild shit, from real flowers to tortoiseshell combs, from lace veils to ostrich plumes, from strings of pearls to turbans:
Coiffure à la chinoise is a hairstyle accomplished by pulling the majority of the (very long) hair tightly back and twisting it up into huge loops on top of the head. This political cartoon (which I’ll discuss at more length some other time, because it is awesome) shows the scalp-tugging process of hairdressing:
Professional hairdressing was mostly a men’s occupation ca. 1830, though many ladies’ maids were also used to do a lady’s hair on a day-to-day basis. The professional hairdresser would make house-calls for special occasion hairdos, especially for very wealthy clients, but he also worked out of a brick-and-mortar shop. These hairdressing salons, much like those of today, were usually located in fancy shopping districts, especially the upscale shopping galleries like the Galerie Vivienne or the Passage des Panoramas (more on these in a later post–I love 1830s shopping galleries). The professional hairdresser advertised through fashion plates, which often give the name both of the dressmaker and the hairdresser whose fashions are being featured. There are also fashion plates just for hairstyles or hat styles, which show a front and back view for each. The hairdresser’s art was just that: an art. His hairstyles were living works of art, statues sitting on top of a lady’s head, and he could command fees accordingly. He would be employed either by the very wealthy or for special events. Less wealthy women could have their maids do their hair, or else do it themselves.
The typical process of 1830 hairdressing began by parting the hair into three sections: one shorter one on each side of the forehead and one longer one in the back. The hair’s part is sometimes located in the center, sometimes on the side, and sometimes v-shaped, like this:
The side sections are curled into ringlets with curling tongs (or else with curling papers or cloths), while the back section is yanked (painfully) into those loops and braids and pinned into place. Pomade is used to keep the hair on top and in the back smooth and straight and shiny. Lots of fake hair pieces are used, too, since of course not everyone is equally endowed, hair-wise.
^^^Here are some mid-19th century false curls mounted on a ribbon, to be tied on the head.
^^^This is another set of ca. 1830 false curls, with its own storage box and all! Of course, when I say “false,” I don’t mean the hair: it’s real human hair. This is the sort of thing that Fantine’s glorious blonde hair would have gone towards making. There are also fake hairpieces for the back of the hair, fake curls, fake loops, fake braids, and so on, but I haven’t yet come across any surviving examples. Female Enjolras would have had to make generous use of these when dressing as a woman, since her hair is cut short for her masculine disguise. (Oh Jesus, let’s not consider the possibility of a side story where female Enjolras ends up unwittingly using hairpieces made from Fantine’s hair…………O__O)
^^^Another late 1830s hairpiece. Most of these fake hairpieces would be intended to be used underneath a morning cap or turban, with just the curls sticking out the front, like so:
This makes it a little easier to see how the fake curls could be tied on with a ribbon or fixed with a net and still not be too obvious.
Back to the coiffure à la chinoise. This style supposedly got its name because 1820s/30s people thought it looked like the traditional hairstyles of Chinese women. (I can kinda see that…..? Though really it looks more like the traditional topknot of Chinese men.) The giant hair loops of the coiffure à la chinoise are sometimes called “apollo knots” as well, though really that applies better to loops like these ladies have, which are imitations of those seen on antique Greek statues of Apollo:
These ladies also have hair pins shaped like a “cupid’s arrow,” which seems to have been a trend at one point:
There are plenty of apollo knots and chinoise hairdos in this period, but really, the hairstyles of the late 1820s/early 1830s are actually quite varied, much more so than I thought before I started researching this stuff. The size and number of the curls, whether they are pinned up on the head or allowed to fall in ringlets alongside the face, or whether there are even curls at all; whether the back of the hair is pulled into loops, swept up in ringlets, braided into a crown shape, and whether it’s decorated with feathers, braids, beads, pearls, hair combs, pins, flowers, veils, ribbons, etc.–all of these points vary widely, sometimes from year to year, but also within each year, according to the individual’s taste.
I’m just going to put up a bunch of hairstyles from between 1825 and 1835, and you can see the wide variety for yourselves:
Remember, all of these examples are from 1825-1835. The smoother, sleeker styles generally tend to be towards the end of this period, and the curlier styles towards the beginning of the period, but sleek styles appear in the late ‘20s and curly styles appear into the ‘40s, so it’s hard to generalize. All the beauty in variety!
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Fanny à Québec
Outfit rundown Dress: vintage Ingeborg (Pink House) Hat, gloves, brooches and belt: vintage Bag: second-hand Métamorphose temps de fille Shoes: old Cobb Hill Socks: Alice and the Pirates
#fashion#vintage#vintage style#vintage fashion#retro fashion#retro style#historical fashion#historybounding#jfashion#pink house#long hairstyles#vintage hair#thrifted fashion#second hand fashion#québec#quebec city#alternative fashion#fannyrosie#fanny rosie
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Portrait of Maria Ivanovna Kochubey-Baryatinskaya, Christina Robertson. 1840s.
#aesthetic#art#art history#fashion#historical fashion#historical art#women in art#victorian#women#victorian aesthetic#1840s#1840s hairstyles#1840s fashion#early victorian period#imperial russian fashion#imperial Russia#russian nobility#nobility aesthetic#royalty aesthetic#royal fashion
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Early 1910s Hairstyles
Gerda Ring (1910-1915) via the Olso Museum // Gertrude Vanderbilt, American art collector and sculptor (1910) via wikipedia // Princess Patricia of Connaught (1912) via npg.org.uk // Anne Johnson of St. Louis (1913) via wikipedia // Hazel Dawn, American actress (1913) via David Shields on pinterest // Ruth Findlay, American actress (1914) via wikipedia
#old photo#fashion history#historical fashion#historical hairstyles#1910s fashion#1910s#1910#1911#1912#1913#1914#titanic era#edwardian era#edwardiana#early 20th century#20th century fashion#old photograph#silent film#e
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asparagus seller flirting with the merchant’s wife
[after pieter de hooch’s 'the asparagus vendor,’ c. 1675-1680]
#em draws stuff#historical illustration#17th century#<- gentlemen. I have no idea how to tag this.#I also have No idea of what’s going on with the merchant’s wife’s hairstyle but I’ve made a valiant attempt#anyway yeah I saw this painting in person a few days ago and I liked them :)
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Portrait of a young man with hand-coloured details c. 1855, American.
#miwackulous tye monday#1850s#historical men's fashion#neckwear#historical hairstyles#black history#1855#daguerreotype#early victorian era#waistcoat
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Old women TRAGIC yuri?!
#1670#1670 netflix#this is the best polish comedy ive seen i think#not that teh bar is high but it's really good#random thought: i love that they're wearing hats and different headpieces. i dunno if they're historically accurate (propably not as most#costumes) but they set the mood and are 1000x better than any kind of nonhistorical hairstyle they couldve put the actors in and i love the#polblr#polishposting
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[Hanfu · 漢服]Chinese Tang Dynasty(618–907AD)Traditional Clothing Hanfu Based On Dunhuang Mural
Challenge restore the seven ladies in the Tang Dynasty murals
【Historical Artifacts Reference 】:
China Tang Dynasty Dunhuang Mural:
《都督夫人太原王氏礼佛图/Governor Wife Mrs.Wang and her daughters and servants in Cave 130 of Mogao Grottoes in Dunhuang》
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Recreation Work:@嵛清
🧚🏻Model∶@嵛清
🔗Xiaohongshu:https://www.xiaohongshu.com/explore/64705b840000000013030c28
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#hanfu#Tang Dynasty(618–907AD)#chinese hanfu#hanfu accessories#hanfu_challenge#china#chinese traditional clothing#chinese#都督夫人太原王氏礼佛图#Governor Wife Mrs.Wang and her daughters and servants in Cave 130 of Mogao Grottoes in Dunhuang#漢服#汉服#中華風#chinese historical makeup#chinese historical fashion#historical hairstyle
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the blood is the life
#vampire hunters au#sometimes u just have to spend 27 hours on something nobody cares about but u ok……#wonder girl#cassie sandsmark#arrowette#cissie king jones#secret dc#greta hayes#cissiecassie#young justice 1998#didnt put them in their masks becauseeee. i didnt want to#the version of this universe that lives in my head is now so different from the comic universe that it may as well be an original au#btw yes i am aware the silhouettes and hairstyles in this one are less historically accurate
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the マガレイト (magareito) hairstyle, popular among school girls and young women during the late meiji to early taisho period
#meiji era#meiji period#meiji restoration#taisho era#taisho period#kimono hairstyles#japanese hairstyles#historical hairstyles#japanese illustration#japanese art#writing moodboard
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❤️ OTMA hairstyle appreciation post ❤️
#romanov#romanovs#romanov sisters#otma#russian imperial family#russian royalty#hair#hairstyle#vintage hairstyles#1914#1916#1910s#1900s#vintage fashion#history#historical photo#historical photos#romanov formals#romanov informals#standart#olga nikolaevna#tatiana nikolaevna#maria nikolaevna#anastasia nikolaevna#anastasia romanov#imperial russia#1913#ernst of hesse#the little pair
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1910s
#fashion#historical#historical fashion#history#long hair#hairstyle#edwardian era#edwardian#Edwardian hairstyles#20th century#20th century fashion#university#college#circa 1910
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Fin de l'été à l'Île d'Orléans Dress: second-hand Seraphim Bag: second-hand Métamorphose temps de fille Hat: Anonhat Shoes: old Cobb Hill Brooch: vintage Corsage: Pauline Rose Socks: Shimamura
#fashion#jfashion#vintage#vintage style#vintage fashion#historybounding#historical fashion#classiclolita#seraphim#ile d'orleans#st-antoine-de-tilly#dolly kei#long hairstyles#secondhand fashion#slow fashion#fanny rosie#fannyrosie
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The Cup of Tea, Alfred Stevens. 1874.
#aesthetic#art#art history#fashion#historical fashion#victorian#historical art#women in art#victorian aesthetic#women#Victorian fashion#1870s#1870s aesthetic#1870s hairstyles#Alfred Stevens#historical#history#Belgian art#Victorian era#Victorian women#gilded age#the gilded age#gilded age fashion
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1/6 daguerreotype
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What're enemies without a tense, intimate dance?
Comission for the loveliest @rachelsquill ! Comm info here
#commission#my art#fennec.art#thank you again rachel 😊#the girl on the right's dress is rococo. hairstyle is renaissance#the rococo dress is a robe a la francaise btw. the hairstyle isnt totally accurate cus who gaf#alas i can never not put some historical thought into my arf#anyway go give rachel lots of love she has the best characters and is so so sweet#incredibly breasy comm experience finished the thing in like 2 days
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