A number of months ago I noticed this hair.
The New York Times has been noticing hair like this too, for yesterday it ran an article on the resurgence of Veronica Lake “peekaboo” hair.
Once upon a time I had hair like this, though I didn’t want it then. I had just had my typical cut, when I asked my stylist about the possibility of Andie MacDowell/Kim Basinger hair pour moi. (My wave holds a curl quite well.)
But he pooh poohed me and said we should try something else.
So two hours later, after tiny rollers galore, I emerged with Bacall/Lake/Kelly hair.
It was lovely, but oh! the work! Even my stylist said he’d be reluctant to try that again (the nerve!). . .
The New York Times has been noticing hair like this too, for yesterday it ran an article on the resurgence of Veronica Lake “peekaboo” hair.
Once upon a time I had hair like this, though I didn’t want it then. I had just had my typical cut, when I asked my stylist about the possibility of Andie MacDowell/Kim Basinger hair pour moi. (My wave holds a curl quite well.)
But he pooh poohed me and said we should try something else.
So two hours later, after tiny rollers galore, I emerged with Bacall/Lake/Kelly hair.
It was lovely, but oh! the work! Even my stylist said he’d be reluctant to try that again (the nerve!). . .
None other than Sally Hershberger assures NYT readers that this truly is a labor intensive look (it’s really “done,” I believe she said), but still, where there’s a pincurl, there’s a way—or a wave.
2 comments:
When I was a teenager, my parents used to call me Veronica Lake because I always had bangs over one eye. But I didn't have them as part of a beautiful wavy 'do like that.
I believe it. I look at those waves and see endless hours of work.
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