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UP STYLING

Discover the art of upstyling for weddings, prom, graduations, birthday parties, the office, and more! Plan, prep, and use great products to achieve stunning updos. Learn about foundations, ponytails, bobby pins, teasing, and more. Explore hairstyles throughout the decades and find the perfect look for your face shape.

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UP STYLING

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  1. UPSTYLING

  2. Who needs one?????? • Weddings • Prom • Graduations • Birthday Party's • The office girl • You!!!!

  3. 3 P’s • Plan • Prep • Product

  4. Great products to use • Air control • Control force • Brilliant hairspray • Brilliant spay on shine • Brilliant retexturizing gel • Smoothing fluid • Damage Control • Hair Potion • Control paste • Shaping wax • Texterizg cream

  5. Foundations What are the 3 foundations

  6. Pony When this celebrity pulls her hair up, you should notice that she never goes overboard with the neatness. Instead, she tends to let her hair stay somewhat loose and free. She never restricts herself to sleek and tightly pulled back buns. Her hair tends to be slightly messy, yet very put together.

  7. Bobby Pins The bobby pin is most commonly used for holding back hair without calling attention to itself. The bobby pin is used to create a variety of hairstyles where a slight hold is needed, but where the conspicuous use of barrette would be undesirable. I'm going to show you how to use a bobby pin. Believe it or not a lot of stylist don't know how to use. The first trick to using a bobby pin is making sure its one that has a lot of grip and for this I would go to a beauty supply store that specializes in it rather than going to a drug store because a lot of the bobby pins at the drug stores they give to much room between the wedges

  8. Tease Amy Winehouse's beehive hairdo was her crown and glory. Amy's hairdresser was Alex Fodden who was a long term friend of Amy's. Alex Fodden was sacked as Amy's hairstylist in 2008, as it was claimed Alex Fodden was a bad influence on Amy.

  9. Tools • Head Sheets • Manniqunne head and stand • Clips • Rat tail comb • Combs • Demend brush • Paddle brush • Bobby pins/hair pins • Rubber bands • Curling iron • Flat iron

  10. Face Shapes • Our hair and make-up can change every day, but our face shape is one of the most permanent and defining of our features. • Discover your face shape for a head start when it comes to choosing the perfect hairstyle and make-up tips so you can make the most of you, and your clients highest potienal.

  11. 1900s • In this age of Edward the VII, many hairstyles were full and large, the result of having a maid to assist in creating the look. Even as the styles began to shorten, they maintained a fullness. During this time, permanent hair curling was invented, so that a woman could have the curls of a young girl which would hold for months. This look was most notable in the subsequent decade thanks to Toronto girl, Gladys Louise Smith, (Mary Pickford). At the same time that the fashionable ladies were having their hair puffed up, many women first began to let their hair down to show long flowing curls, or they were styled into ringlets and sausage curls.

  12. 1910 • In the early years, the well-to-do woman still had the time or resources to work on her hair and her image, striving for elegance and artistry. The hair framed the face and the thin face was often improved by puffing the hair at the sides, to which purpose the hair could be parted in the center. Curls and ringlets were yet in style, promoted in the more exaggerated fashion by the Cinderellas of the screen, as portrayed by Mary Pickford and Lilian Gish. Those with round faces could fluff the hair or dress it up.

  13. 1920 • This was a decade for bobbed hair and smoking in public, not to mention showing your knees. Body styles were thin and curveless with streamlined hats and hairstyles. The hair came off and styles were short or pulled back with ringlets on the forehead and ears.

  14. 1930s • For women's fashions, the long sleek appearance was most desirable, shoulders were padded and puffed, and hair was waved and shoulder-length

  15. 1940s • Hair stylest in this decade saw tresses curled and rolled longer than shoulder-length. Gone were the easy days and plannings that came with prom hair dos and standard weddings. A few rare big nights out, meant putting your hair up into compact elegant up-dos. But just think of the long curling styles demonstrated by the movie stars of the time from Veronica Lake to Lauren Bacall.

  16. 1950s • Hair was generally soft and curly, often short and imaginative. The oddball woman's cut of the decade was the poodle cut, most notably used by Lucille Ball, and for men it was the ducktail, with the hair combed back and a duck's butt made out of a center part. Men also had the crewcut and the flattop

  17. 1960s • Hair was everywhere from Audrey Hepburn short to long blonde shoulder length, with a flash of Dusty Springfield beehives and ended with hippy unkemptness and back to short again with Mary Quant. The ponytail disappeared.

  18. 1970s • The 1970s hairstyles were born out the hippie movement and leaned towards the natural look. Hair was long, infrequently big, but luxurious, as best exhibited by Farrah Fawcett's feathered look. Curlers were not often required, you certainly didn't go to bed in them, and the messy look was acceptable. Without the advantage of straightening irons, a clothing iron sometimes was required to highlight the best of long locks. You couldn't do it yourself, or you could risk scorching your treasure, after which your only option might be to convert to a shorter style. The fully-rounded Afro was a dominant look, worn by many cultures in support equal rights. The Shag was born along with the mullet for men.

  19. 1980s • For those of us who were there, 80s hairstyles make us cringe with embarrassment. For those who weren't, well, you can stop laughing now. What was it that caused us to wear our funky 80s hairstyles like a badge of honor? From the bangs that reached for the heavens with frizzy passion, to the extremely asymmetrical new  wave social hair statement, to the funky side ponytails walking hair-in-hair with the mullets, hairstyles in the 1980s were about excess, experimentation, and enough hairspray to protect our heads when the Russians dropped the bomb.

  20. 1990s • In the early 1990s, women's hair changed from the teased curls popular in the late 1980s to straight, smooth hair, inspired by late 1960s hairstyles. The pixie cut and Rachel haircut, based on the hairstyles of Jennifer Aniston in Friends and Marlo Thomas in That Girl, were popular in America from 1995 onwards. Straight hair was also styled with a short fringe cut just above the eyebrows, known as a hime cut, and those with Afro-styled or naturally curly hair would rely on a Relaxer to keep the sleek straight hair. In the mid 1990s this style went out fashion until its revival in the late 2000s

  21. 2000s • The times eras from 2000+ are just going to be repeating its self from time eras in the past….

  22. By the end of class you can do this!

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