Monday, October 8, 2012

The Nautilus




Argh! I swore I wouldn't wear this bun in a while because its like.. my stand by but today was wash day. Wash day means my hair is loose like 60% of the day while it dries and once its dry enough it goes up.

Well, I'm sick. Have been for about a week now and today was the day where I felt less like a zombie in long enough that I had the strength/drive to wash my hair. I woke up at like 12:30 and it took me about four hours to finally get off my butt to go wash my hair. Its not that I'm lazy its just that I've felt like ubber crap. So, for the better part of the day I had my hair in Dutch braid, albeit a very messy one.

Its like past dinner time, Jouji and I decided to cook our dinner instead of being lazy like we've been so up it went. Into one of the easiest buns I could muster and the only one I could wear this lovely fork with. Its getting to the point where I can't wear it anymore, at all. My hair just spits it out in most buns as its so thick.

-sniff- I shall miss you, Veronica.

Yes. I name my toys. -huff-

Sunday, October 7, 2012

The Medallion

Aka my own twist on the Elling Woman hairstyle.

The original starts with a half-up half-down hairstyle with the main English braid coming from the crown. After a few plaits or so, the rest of the hair is gathered into a larger braid, then it is looped in on itself on the gap caused by the first plaits.

It looks something like this:


For more on the Elling Woman, go here.
The whole website is simply *fascinating* 
.
I have two problems when trying to wear this style that makes it almost impossible.

1) I am tender headed and prone to migraines.

2) I'm a ii/iii hair thickness, i.e. I got a lot of hair. More so than the average person but not quite enough to be considered 'extremely thick hair'. Thick hair , when not managed properly often cause pain when worn up. Someone like me with a tender scalp who is prone to migraines wearing a bun with a central point of weight distribution is just a disaster waiting to happen.

So I tried this style a few times in different variations: the original loop as found on the Elling Woman and as the speculated original wear of a the tail wrapped around to make a braided bun (some believe the bun became unraveled at some point like during the hanging or burial). Each time I wound up undoing it because of the pain. It looked beautiful, don't get me wrong, but I'm of the thought that beauty does not equate pain.

On Oct 1 I decided to wear my hair semi-loose to work and I had it clipped in a barrette. True to usual fashion, about two hours into my shift I was going bat shit crazy and tried putting it up. I did a clip-version of the Elling Woman. That lasted for about another two hours.

So I redid it again but two hours later I was in pain *again*. (I tried supporting the weight with bobby pins but that just ended up with a focal point of distribution with added pressure of the pins.)

Then I figured out what my husband so kindly dubbed "The Medallion."



1) To start off, I gather the hair in barrette. I then English braid the gathered section as one would normally Dutch braid. (To beginners: English braids are the simple braids we all know and are commonly started with a strand over the other. A Dutch braid is an 'inside out French braid" where the plaits are done by crossing the hair UNDER instead of over. All I'm saying here is that I did the traditional 3 strand braid but started crossing under instead of over.)

2) I began to gather sections from just behind the ears to form an official Dutch braid. I braided this to the end.

3) Inserting my fingers into the gap caused by the original plaits (because it isn't Dutch Braided at all, it causes a hair version of a belt loop), gathered the tail of the braid and looped it through. I kept going until I had no more hair left.

4) Pinned it all with some goody pins.

And viola, a complicated looking-but-simple bun that resembles the Ellen Woman style without pulling. The Dutch braid gives the whole style support so the weight of the bun is distributed along the whole back of the head versus the area where the loop ends. I tried French braiding and that's how I figured out how to do this originally. Its just that the Dutch braid puts more support along the scalp and minimizes pulling the best.

 Enjoy!

October Days and another project.

I've noticed that lately I've been playing with my hair less and falling into a horrible rut. Its always the same bun or same braid.

I plan to change that. I'm stealing an idea from one of my lovely LHCers and because the forum is broken (again), I'll pick it up here.

October Days. My aim is to photograph every up do I every day this month in an effort to break out of the monotony.

Starting tomorrow because honestly, I wore the French Fold all day today. It was pretty awesome..

At least until I got a migraine because I'm getting sick and the U pins didn't help the issue.

Then there's this too:

http://fabbulush.blogspot.com/2012/10/real-shapes-from-light-fantastic.html

I've been feeling super down lately and haven't been staying focused on the bright side of things. But I want to change that and share that there IS beauty in everything, everywhere even in the most popular conception of  ugly.

I hope to publish a post a week at Faubulush. I just hope I get some more jucier pieces to work on.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

I have conquered thee, Alien Head



I have finally figured out a French "Twist" for my hair.


Turns out is more of a French fold than a twist. So, its all about gathering a low pony, flipping the tail over the hand, twisting the 'log' and then winding the remainder of the tail over the thumb and finger. Tuck the wind up section underneath the log, adjust and pin.

I have this held in place with three U pins. Its solid. Its comfortable. Its very office friendly. Huzzah! A winter-friendly style to wear that won't get rubbed by scarves. Heck, I may even be able to wear a hat over it!