CHILDREN'S HAIR
.Bach child has 10. bo,carefully studied .as an individual, if her hair'is' to be done in tho most'becoming way, says a London1 writer.1 -Most' mothers like their children to have'curls, and, for girls, curls are the; general rule. Tho impulso that soino mothers have, however, to coax.their small son's hair into curls should be sternly suppressed. Boys' hairs must be cut straight and rather short, with' a side, parting.
■ The popular style for'little girls is a long, wavy: shiiiglo,'parted at either left or right side, with a .short fringe across the forehead to cover' the gap betweeu the hair on either side. It suits tho oval face of llieaveragolittle
schoolgirl. ' ' A stylo for the quaint and more un-usual-looking child comes from Paris. The hair is taken right back from the forehead without1 a parting, mid a tbin fringo cut to fall about half an inch übo\c the oyebruus. A narrow ribbon is then-bound right round tho head, under the hair at the back, over the hair at the front, covering the division between hair and fringo, and ending with a demure bow on oucside.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 45, 22 February 1930, Page 19
Word Count
186CHILDREN'S HAIR Evening Post, Volume CIX, Issue 45, 22 February 1930, Page 19
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