Six African American Hairstyles that We Want to Forget
By A.Hermitt (dreahwrites), published Nov 12, 2007
Published Content: 1,147 Total Views: 1,415,202 Favorited By: 73 CPs
6. Process: This hairstyle was worn by young black males from the 1920's to the 1960's. This style is also called �â¬Ëconked' and means the hair is straightened with chemicals. The hair was then worn slicked down to the head. Variations of this style in was waves, where hair was arranged so that it resembled ocean waves, and in the 1970's men who didn't shun the old hairstyle for the afro began putting hair rollers in their hair for a look that could only be called feminine. Rev. Al Sharpton still wears the latter style. Michael Jackson and Prince still process their hair in longer versions of the process hairstyle.
5. Sculpted hair: In the 1980's black women took advantage of the nature of their hair to stand up on its own. Jells were added and sculpted shapes resulted. Black women everywhere were finding new and imaginative gravity defying hairstyles. Patti Labelle is well known for this hairstyle.
4. The Shag: After the afro had faded out, men wanted to retain some semblance of the length they had enjoyed before. So in the 1980's men started to let the hair at the back of their head grow longer than the hair on top. This shag hairstyle closely resembles the mullet worn by white men in the 1990's. The members of the boys group New Edition wore this hairstyle.
3. The High Top Fade: As long hair on the back of the head became a nuisance, men began to grow long hair on top. Like the sculpted hair of women from the same period, this hair stood straight up. Most men wore their high top fades at 1-2 inches, but most some went as far as 4-6 inches. This style was prevalent in the 1990's followed by a period where men began braiding the hair on top so that it hung down. The rap group Kid-n-Play was popular for these hairstyles.
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Posted on 11/22/2007 at 5:11:00 AM