Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Summer’s new hair accessory




Hey ladies, I’m sure many of you have seen celebrities Solange Knowles rocking the  ’Turban look’. And in the picture you can see Chrisette Michele and the Turban Queen June Ambrose (She’s incorporating two trends in one, Colour blocking and the Turban).



Head scarves or Turbans as they are being called are soooo handy because you can dress them up or down, wear them when you don’t really feel like messing with your hair and it’s another way of protecting your hair.
Now whenever I wear mine out, just to ensure my hair isn’t rubbing against the scarf material, I’ll tie my satin scarf underneath, or just use a scarf made of silk/satin material.


 Russian Vogue May 2011 swimwear edition, at what’s the model sporting? A head scarf! So ladies if you haven’t tried this look yet what are you waiting for? Practise with some old material or a scarf you already have. Knowing how to tie one can really save you from a bad hair day too.


Thursday, 19 May 2011

Costly Hairstyle Is a Beauty Trend That Draws Thieves’ Notice

OK I came across this today and I personally can not stop laughing

Published: May 16, 2011 http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/17/us/17hair.html?pagewanted=2&_r=4
The thieves pulled the iron bars out of the windows, outsmarted the motion detector that would have triggered a burglar alarm and did not give the safe or cash register a second look.

Instead they went straight for what was most valuable: human hair. By the time the bandits at the My Trendy Place salon in Houston were finished, they had stolen $150,000 worth of the shop’s most prized type, used for silky extensions.
The break-in was part of a recent trend of thefts, some involving violence, of a seemingly plentiful material. During the past two months alone, robbers in quest of human hair have killed a beauty shop supplier in Michigan and carried out heists nationwide in which they have made off with tens of thousands of dollars of hair at a time.
“I heard about it from a couple of different supply companies and customers who said: ‘Guard your inventory. There’s a rash of this going on,’ ” said Lisa Amosu, the owner of My Trendy Place. “Whoever did it knew exactly what they wanted. They didn’t even bother with the synthetic hair.”
Once stolen, the hair is typically sold on the street or on the Internet, including eBay, shop owners and the police say.
The most expensive hair type — and the one in highest demand by thieves and paying customers alike — is remy hair, which unlike most other varieties is sold with its outermost cuticle layer intact. This allows it to look more natural and to last longer without tangling. Remy hair from Indian women is the most popular.
But remy hair extensions can cost as much as $200 per package and the average person requires at least two packages. Hundreds of dollars more, and at times thousands, are spent at hair salons to have the extensions attached, often by sewing.

In addition to the $150,000 Houston robbery this month, thieves have recently taken $10,000 in hair from a San Diego shop; $85,000 from a business in Missouri City, Tex.; $10,000 from a shop in Dearborn, Mich.; and $60,000 from a business in San Leandro, Calif. All the values were provided by the storeowners.
Law enforcement officials have been perplexed by the sudden increase in the thefts of hair and the violence that has accompanied some. Some agencies say they had been unaware of the trend before, and others are still learning about it.
“That’s the first I’ve heard of it,” said Denise Ballew, a spokeswoman for the F.B.I., who oversees data related to property crimes.
One indication of how quickly the focus of some thieves has shifted to high-end hair is the experience of the Beauty One hair supply store in Chicago: two years ago, thieves went after the store’s cash, but last month, they bypassed the register altogether and took just the hair, which was valued at $90,000.
Detective Vito Ferro of the Chicago Police Department, who is investigating the April 24 robbery, said some recent hair thefts in the city appeared to be the work of people sophisticated enough to have taken custom orders.
“It’s like someone says, ‘I’m looking for a 1992 Cadillac Eldorado,’ and so you go out looking for that car,” Detective Ferro said.
Surveillance cameras outside the Beauty One shop showed bandits using a crowbar and sledgehammer to pry open dead bolts and then loading boxes of hair into a van.
In recent weeks, packages of hair that may have sold for $80 or $100 retail have sold for as little as $25 out of car trunks in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Houston, the authorities said. Hair can be sold at the same types of beauty salons and supply shops that are being robbed.
“They’re selling it to stylists who work out of their house, they’re selling it on the street, they’re selling it out of the car,” said Ms. Amosu of My Trendy Place. “People who don’t want to pay the prices will buy it from the hustle man. It’s like the bootleg DVDs and the fake purses. But this is a quality product.”


TO READ
This is just surreal! Passing up the cash to get to the human hair? There are always black markets operating, but they're usually in things illegal. But hair? 
This is pretty sad because most young black women ask  for straight hair since they think that is the normal way to go as the other black girls at school have extensions despite the cost. Could you imagine other races spending hundreds of pounds and hours of their time to put fake hair on their daughters?

Wednesday, 4 May 2011

WELCOME TO YOUNG & NATURALLY FABULOUS

OK firstly I'm so excited :D :D
So I had this crazy idea to start a Blog that will celebrate beauty, versatility and the elegance of young fabulous women.
This Blog is a platform were I can express how I feel and think about anything. Feel free to roam around the Blog and explore my thoughts and feelings about everything and anything I come across. I will try my best to be organised :).
HOPE YOU ALL ENJOY!!!