Saturday 21 June 2008

Friday 13 June 2008

So cute it will make your hair CURL!

Or corkscrew curls.



First, I need to apologize for my lack of posting. There is a reason they call them the dog days of summer. In my house we lie around lazy like dogs...which results in simple and basic hair styles which I am compiling...but it will take all of one post. Today I was feeling much more ambitious however and did something that has become a favorite in our home.



This post is for those of us who have daughters with straight hair or even wavy hair. I covet curly hair. COVET IT! However, the genetic make-up of my daughters fell short in the hair department when it came to curls. I have accepted this...but only because God made curling irons. Today we curl.





See this stuff? My favorite. I LOVE this stuff. When I curl my daughters hair, it makes the curls so soft, but they hold their shape. LOVE IT!






Start out with dry hair. Her hair was in French braids yesterday, and since I only wash their hair every other day, it has some funky waves going on.



Add your curl sculpting gel.



Then I take and curl the ends with my flat-iron or curling iron. Today it was a flat iron because the curling iron wasn't hot yet and my flat iron is hot in 30 seconds. Dumb curling iron.




I took a section of her hair and pulled it straight up. Then I put the curling iron right at the base of her hair. I apologize for this picture. Amelia was holding the curling iron as I was taking pictures. This is why I don't believe in full-blown evolution folks. Moms would have eight arms. And my curling iron is totally dirty. I have better things to do than to clean my curling irons. I'm keeping it real girls.


I digress. With the curling iron at the base of the hair, wrap the hair around the curling iron. My curling iron is 1/2 inch.



Like so. I don't worry about it wrapping around smooth or twisting as you wrap it. In fact, it makes the curls more twisty. The heat is what you want here. Hold it on the end. Note that the longer you hold the hair on the curling iron, the bouncier (is that a word?) the curl will be. I held these each for about 25 seconds.




Then I let go. Now the reason that I curled the ends prior to these is because I am not adding these curls to the entire head of hair. I don't have that kind of time.



But I do add some more...



...and a few more.



Then I let them cool. In this case I came downstairs and ate a Hershey's Kiss, then I went upstairs and finger combed her hair from underneath to separate the curls.




Then I scrunched them and sprayed them. You don't have to separate them. I will show you a picture of them not separated. It is cute either way.


Then I finished the front.







HA!!! Gotcha. Do you really think I would let her out of the house like that? Not that we are going anywhere.



So we added a clip.
Oh, and as a side note. Notice those baby bangs? A couple of weeks ago, she asked me if we could cut them off. I told her no. Her dad and I both had them until we hit puberty. If we cut them, the ones underneath would look silly. A couple of days later, I was pulling her hair into a ponytail, and I had these little pokey up hairs everywhere. She WHACKED THEM OFF! Here is a lesson to me. Don't discount that because she is almost 8 that you made it through her entire childhood without cutting her hair. It doesn't work that way.




This is what it looks like not separated.

The End.

Friday 6 June 2008

Loopy Messy Bun

Get out those bobby pins girls, we're going to make loops today.


Start with a ponytail
Section out a part of the ponytail. I made five sections with hers.

Loop the section up over the ponytail...like so.


Here is where the bobby pins come in handy. Use the bobby pins to secure the loop to the hair. When you put the bobby pins in, cross them. It helps them to stay secure and not slip. Don't worry about the end of the hair...we will fix that later. Just push it to the side and ignore it.



Loop the rest of your sections. See all that stray hair? Here is where we fix it.


Pull the ends up through your loops. I did this by dividing the ends in half and putting each half out the side of it's loop. You can stop right here if you want to because I love the messy look. But my daughter doesn't, so we kept on going.

I curled each of the ends with my trusty flat-iron.
Then I sprayed the heck out of it with hairspray because it was a rainy day and her hair doesn't do so well in the rain.
Then added flowers to the top.


Now, I should have fluffed each of the curls to give it a messy look...but as I said, it was a rainy day and that would have just been a big old mess because we went to lunch and shopping. I didn't want to deal with a big old mess.

Monday 2 June 2008

This is what it's all about

I am so excited. I am getting pictures from all of you on styles you have taken from here and made them your own!

Cami sent me these and I was so happy to see what she had done. She had tried the Lattice Ponytails and they turned out darling.

Then she took it another way. Upside down to be exact.

See how cute!




Keep those pictures coming ladies! I have about 4000 e-mails that I need to go through and if I missed one of yours, would you please send it again.

Triple French Braids

Sorry for the slack blogging lately. Life...ya know?

Here is a submitted tip from Hilary. Her daughter has beautiful red hair and this style really shows it off.

Section the hair into three parts, one in the middle and one on each side.

I would temporarily pull all sections into elastics to make it easier to braid.

Braid each section down past the hairline and secure with an elastic.

Braid all three braids together and secure with one more elastic.