|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Family & health > Personal appearance & beauty care > Cosmetics, make-up & skin care
Hair braiding is getting hotter by the day, and the evolution of
styles has grown just as rapidly. The New Braiding Handbook offers
you an impressive array of easy-to-re-create, beautiful, and
versatile looks that are as appropriate for elegant formal events
as they are practical for casual, everyday wear. With step-by-step
photos and detailed instructions for creating trendy knots, chic
twists, and playful plaits, The New Braiding Handbook teaches
imaginative and intricate hairstyling like you've never seen
before. Fifty looks to choose from guarantee a braid for every
occasion (or no occasion at all). Along with amazing styles and
easy-to-follow tutorials, there are also tons of tips for
eliminating split ends, bulking up limp locks, growing out a short
'do, and getting a full, healthy, shiny head of hair straight from
the pages of a magazine.
From the latter part of the 19th century there was a fever of
experiment resulting in the development of what were to become
brand-named beauty products. Some manufacturers were generally
interested in producing 'healthy' products that could beautify
without harming; others were chancers climbing on the band wagon.
Most beauty product manufacturers started with one or two
specialised products - for the hair or nails or skin - but
eventually all involved in the beauty industry seemed to be selling
everything - from lipsticks to false eye lashes; minnows in the
industry were swallowed up by whales. Advertising for beauty
products moved with social trends - from flapper girl to Carnaby
Street Twiggy lookalikes. Gullible consumers were offered solutions
to achieving their dreams - to look forever young, to attract
attention, to land Mr. or Mrs. Right. Sellers of Dreams charts the
advertiser's skills in promising dreams would come true.
|
|