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More on the Beehive!!


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#1 amylove

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Posted 14 November 2013 - 06:32 PM

From The Independent
Dec. 22, 2007

Wearing the beehive: The Amy Winehouse experience

Her remarkable voice and riotous lifestyle are already legendary. But could the Camden chanteuse's greatest legacy be a crazy out- sized barnet? As hair fashions reach dizzying new heights, Alice- Azania Jarvis gets to grips with the beehive...

My brush with fame

Over-the-knee socks, the shoe-boot, those high-waisted jeans: when you recount trends that women have embraced this year, the word flattering is not the first to leap to mind. But the beehive? Surely fashion wouldn't be so fickle.

Well, actually it would. And the inspiration? None other than the chart-sensation-cum-trainwreck Amy Winehouse, she of the sailor tattoos, bloodied ballet pumps and the perennial jeans-and-vest combination. Suspicious as it may sound, Winehouse's towering hairdo is set to become next year's answer to the Pob - or at least if the singer's latest admirers are to be believed. Which, when they include Karl Lagerfeld, they probably are.

Such is Winehouse's allure that the designer paid direct homage to her at the Chanel show he staged in London this month, sending models down the runway wearing impressively vertiginous up-dos and heavily kohl-rimmed eyes. When asked about his muse, the designer announced that Winehouse is "the new Brigitte Bardot": gap-toothed, boundary breaking and - most importantly - beehived.

In New York, the prestigious Bumble and Bumble hairdressing school is now introducing modules geared specifically to recreating the "do". And with Hairspray hitting the West End jackpot, and model Noemie Lenoir sporting a hefty blonde bouffant in the M&S Christmas campaign, the one-time favourite of Mari Wilson is becoming impossible to ignore. But should we all be reaching for our backcomb? I'm not convinced. The hairstyle may be fashionable, but for every Breakfast at Tiffany's beehive moment, there's a Bet Lynch or Marge Simpson moment right behind. Am I bold enough to brave it? Will I be able, even, to lift my head to the challenge. I decide to call the hair salon.

It's 11am by the time I meet Cinta Martello, one of Racoon International's curiously titled extensionists. With nine years' experience styling shoots, she's a veteran in the world of celebrity hair. Racoon specialises in applying so-called "microwefts" - a sort of mid-term hair extension: more enduring than anything found outside a salon but, with a lifespan of two-four weeks, less permanent than conventional "bonded" extensions. At 200 per head they're certainly not cheap, but they are reusable so, once the first set is applied, subsequent sessions cost less. They're also unique in their ethicacy: sourced solely within Europe, using donations from Spanish monasteries, the extensions are 100 per cent real hair.

Martello holds up an inch-thick lock and shows me a patch of adhesive. In order to create my beehive, Martello is going to apply several of these strips to my roots, which will then be pressed together with an alarmingly large pair of forceps. Any doubts I might have about the wisdom of applying glue to my hair are only slightly dispelled by the fact that Winehouse is one of Racoon's clients. Winehouse's hairstyle, Martello confides, is made up almost entirely of extensions, though she's been known to add extra wadding - a polystyrene-like padding - for dramatic effect. I've decide to give this last step a miss; an extension-enhanced beehive sounds conspicuous enough as it is.

Just how big a beehive should be appears to be a matter of some debate. Can a beehive be too big? "The bigger, the glammer," says Martello emphatically. What, just like Amy Winehouse, I ask nervously? "I'm thinking more Chanel than Amy," she says, fussing over my fringe. "Sometimes that girl looks like she's been dragged through a hedge backwards, bless her. But when Karl Lagerfeld did it, he really made it classy. The beehive should be much more about old Hollywood glamour. It should be fun, but sexy and elegant, too."

I've always had a round face and, in moments of weakness, have been known to resent my round nose. With a beehive in tow will I not simply be a cartoonish conglomeration of circles: spherical hair, saucer-eyes, round nose and face, beads and bubble-skirt optional?

Martello thinks not: "The only people who can't carry off beehives are the ones with really long faces. Amy's not classically beautiful, but the beehive emphasises her features." If anything, I'm told, the hive will be streamlining. It should, after all, leave me at least four inches taller.

The session itself is fairly quick. The extensions are by far the most technical part - whatever's going on back there, I'm sure I couldn't do it myself - but, when they're finished, I'm amazed by the colour match. It's almost perfect; the locks flowing from my head are so well-blended that they bear no resemblance to the solid colour-blocks laid out earlier. It's now that the styling comes in, and Martello keeps me briefed at each stage.

She starts with a thorough hair teasing (although the process is so vigorous, I wonder if bullying might be more accurate) and then gathers together the tangles to form a sort of hairy clump around my crown. Out the corner of my eye, I can just make out the photographer's sceptical expression. I start to wonder if Martello has forgotten her promise of Karl rather than Amy. But at the last minute she gathers up some loose strands, sweeping them dramatically up and smoothing them elegantly over my emerging hive. Does it feel heavy, she asks? In fact, the whole arrangement feels surprisingly light and strangely detached. It's rather like having a small golden- brown cloud hovering just above my head.

Beehives, in one form or another, have been around since the 18th century. The powdered wigs of Louis XVI were not, after all, too different from the golden locks of Brigitte Bardot. But it wasn't until the summer of 1960, when the Chicago hairdresser Margaret Vinci Heldt received a particularly vain though somewhat vertically- challenged customer that the bouffant graduated to official hive status. With its four-inch altitude, the style was first and foremost a means of enhancing the wearer's stature.

As the decade wore on, and hemlines rose, the beehive slowly ascended - and female beauty regimes grew increasingly complicated. Without today's hair extensions, adhesives and curlers, the quest for big hair 40 years ago was considerably more arduous. Women would set their hair in rollers, and then sit for up to an hour under the hairdryer. Then followed hours of backcombing, styling and pinning. At night, women were advised to wrap their hive in tissue-paper and sleep on satin pillow cases to keep it intact. Hairspray sales boomed; by 1964 it had overtaken lipstick as the nation's most popular cosmetic. Meanwhile, school corridors filled with whispered tales of scalps being bitten by lurking spiders.

But hidden spiders are the least of my concerns. As Martello puts the finishing touches on my barnet, it's the day-to-day practicalities of life that I'm finding more daunting. It occurs to me that one should dress appropriately for such a glamorous hairstyle. Standing here in my everyday jeans and T-shirt, I suddenly feel hopelessly upstaged. By my hair. And I've still got to face the office.

Arriving at my desk, I run through Martello's parting advice: "Do carry some hair spray with you, don't use gel; do wear an Alice band if you want to; don't be afraid to accessorise." Her final words are the most fundamental: "A beehive's not practical, so remember to avoid anywhere un-glam. The gym isn't glamorous, so don't go there. Don't do any jogging, swimming or aerobics."

Throughout the day my hair elicits a range of responses. Some colleagues eye me suspiciously - (probably) noting my failure to accessorise. Others coo approvingly. And I get more than a few sniggers.

By lunch time, I'm feeling confident. I start to imagine myself in a denim pencil skirt, or a vintage trench - or, for that matter, a little black dress? I'm cheered by its day-worn dishevelment; less Doris Day, more Brigitte Bardot, or so I like to think.

When the clock strikes six, the trip home looms. As I step on to the Tube I have to duck to avoid getting caught in the door. But still I feel smug, glimpsing my reflection in the window pane. It isn't until I reach the street again that I realise it's raining. Umbrellaless as I am I head out, thinking that perhaps the hive might shield me.

By the time I get home, it's irretrievable: where once I had a beehive, I now have a soggy mass of knotted hair.

It was, without doubt, the most sophisticated hairdo I've ever had and, if ever my turn came to wear Chanel, I'd do it again in a flash. Glamorous the beehive may be, but for life in the real world? Maybe not.

http://www.independe...nce-766669.html

Edited by allisost, 14 November 2013 - 06:37 PM.


#2 melnyk

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Posted 14 November 2013 - 10:55 PM

"Caution! The article contains overdose of glamour!" :-) I hope it made Amy smile if she red it in the 2007th.

Thank you for sharing!

V.Melnyk


#3 BeehiveQueen

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Posted 15 November 2013 - 12:56 AM

I do a beehive almost everyday unless I'm home sick or on a long flight. I love it. I don't feel like "me" without it. Everybody should feel glamourous.

#4 HelloSailor

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Posted 25 January 2014 - 02:10 PM

Not too sure where to post it, this concerns Amy's beehive:


At 1:58 she's cackling away as she's having her crazy hair done. I've never seen this footage before, but I just love this! Anyone know of more videos of Amy's beehive under construction?
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#5 Uno

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Posted 25 January 2014 - 03:48 PM

Anyone know of more videos of Amy's beehive under construction?


This is a screenshot that I took from one of the documentaries that came out a few years ago where she was getting her hair done, can't remember which one tho ...


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Edited to say ...

I remembered which documentary, it starts at about 38:00 where you can see her hair piece hanging up near the mirror


Edited by Uno, 26 January 2014 - 03:36 AM.

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#6 BeehiveQueen

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Posted 26 January 2014 - 08:22 AM

Thanks for posting! I do a beehive pretty much the same way with a hair extension and a hair piece to create height/shape.

#7 HelloSailor

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Posted 26 January 2014 - 10:35 AM

Thanks Uno!
I'm not much of a fan of her later hairdo (the high pony tail), but I have always wonder how she did it.
I always used to think Amy just had really thick hair, didn't realize she had extensions also.

#8 Birdieava

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Posted 28 January 2014 - 09:46 AM

i love amys hairstyle... my hair is a lot like amys in this picture
i do mini'beehives with hair ties, its fun and maybe it will grow.hehehee

what i learned from amy is that if u back comb your hair and do it daily, your hair will grow so healthy and full.
my mom says that too...if you do 100 brush strokes (back combing), every day ,it will make your hair grow.

amys hair got very healthy in st lucia: <3 love!

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#9 BeehiveQueen

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Posted 28 January 2014 - 03:21 PM

Back combing is REALLY bad for your hair. Trust me!
Amy had some really nice extensions to assist in lessening the back combing.

Don't do it unless you really want to knot up your hair and have split ends for days.

#10 Birdieava

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Posted 28 January 2014 - 09:58 PM

Back combing is REALLY bad for your hair. Trust me!
Amy had some really nice extensions to assist in lessening the back combing.

Don't do it unless you really want to knot up your hair and have split ends for days.


ohh!
:livid:
yup, i have been guilty of breaking my hair and making it very unmanageable.. my hair is wavy and dry, so it's a real challenge!
then, i got into Aveda (have you heard of their products?) and into doing everything ''correctly''...
now i cannot afford hair products, so i take care of it myself -- from cutting it to making 'natural' alternative conditioners with natural stuff like aloe vera and olive oil, and i can get away with a 2.99 shampoo ... :-)
crazy huh?

you can see amys hair really benefited from being by the ocean, sun and salt ...


i try not to break my hair, i brush it gently either with my own fingers and/or a comb, from back to front,
the point is to brush it in different direction than it grows (against the grain)..
i have been trying this as trick to seeif i can get it longer: i read on the net.
i ''brush'' daily and when my hair is dry i tie it up during the day and then down during the night, i found that this makes my hair grow faster...im getting somewhere finally since i cut all my curls off last year.

how do you do your beehive , [MENTION=3199]BeehiveQueen[/MENTION]?
is there more than one way to do this?

like, i dont wear a head piece, so i just use hair ties. hair pins are a no no for me.
how do you take care of your hair? ;-)

- - - Updated - - -

Thanks for posting! I do a beehive pretty much the same way with a hair extension and a hair piece to create height/shape.


OHH i see now! never mind my question! ,-)

there are ways to create volume without a hair piece, like back combing (i confused you earlier because i know what this is.,,,,, when you grab hair strands and comb from ends to scalp, correct?)... yajjj you wouldnt want to do that. its horrible for your hair!

what i meant actually by back combing was to brush against the hair grain,,, sorry but my english can get really bad at times!!

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#11 BeehiveQueen

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Posted 30 January 2014 - 03:16 PM

I have a few ways of doing my beehive.

1- Sectioning off hair, hair spray on the roots, and forming just this giant mass of hair with long bobby pins into the beehive.
Use hairspray to form a final shape using my hands to smooth it over.

2- I have spent years building a piece made out of 2 hair donuts and my own homemade rat.
Back in the 60's women saved the hair out of their hairbrush so they could make something that matched their haircolor.
My hair donut is covered with my hair so it won't show through even though the piece is black anyway.
I use some large pins to secure it to my hair. I have already sectioned off the front part of my hair and just flip it over.
You have to have really long hair for either method to work. Which is why I'd assume Amy had some very very long extensions.

Extensions are very very expensive and most hair dressers I know try to talk me out of them anytime I get a wild hair about it.
They tend to pull your real hair out at the root.
You may notice some photos of Amy where she has her short hair in St. Lucia but appears to have little bald spots.
Either could be caused by extensions of simply ratting you hair and it breaking.

#12 HelloSailor

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Posted 01 February 2014 - 03:04 PM

you can see amys hair really benefited from being by the ocean, sun and salt ...



And possibly from not using as much hairspray, no longer having extensions to pull on her roots and back-coming her hair daily for her beehive.
I always wondered whether she cut her hair because it had gotten quite unhealthy (from the beehive, anorexia and drug abuse) or whether she was trying to get away from the fame, her image, etc... or both.

#13 LaPeep

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Posted 08 February 2014 - 04:41 AM

http://www.hisandher...ip-on-hair.html. I used to buy my mini-falls and hair extensions from them years ago when i lived in LA and used to do beehives and 60's bobs. They have a really big selection. Better to go unperson and match your hair
"I don't know her, I never met her, and when I saw that pic, I thought, 'That's me!' But then I found out, no, it's Amy........Ronnie Spector of the Ronettes

#14 BeehiveQueen

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Posted 08 February 2014 - 06:20 AM

Thanks for the heads up [MENTION=524]LaPeep[/MENTION] I was scoping some extensions out but wasn't sure which ones to get.

#15 Uno

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Posted 08 February 2014 - 10:56 AM

Amy creating the 'hive' for her friend Catriona Gourlay ...

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