Wednesday 29 February 2012

The Black Hair Story by Michelle/Naturally Curly

View the Original Post :A Look Back at the Black Hair Story at naturallycurly.com


Whether it’s activist Angela Davis’s Afro or hip-hop diva Lil’ Kim’s “weave of the week,” black hair has long had the power to set trends and reflect societal attitudes.
BunSince February is Black History Month — a time to remember important people and events that shaped the lives of African Americans—we thought it was an ideal time to explore how hairstyles have been interwoven into that history. It is a story that continues to evolve. Here is a look back at some of the key events and people who shaped the black hairstory.
1444: Europeans trade on the west coast of Africa with people wearing elaborate hairstyles, including locks, plaits and twists.
1619: First slaves brought to Jamestown; African language, culture and grooming tradition begin to disappear.
1700s: Calling black hair “wool,” many whites dehumanize slaves. The more elaborate African hairstyles cannot be retained.
1800s: Without the combs and herbal treatments used in Africa, slaves rely on bacon grease, butter and kerosene as hair conditioners and cleaners. Lighter-skinned, straight-haired slaves command higher prices at auction than darker, more kinky-haired ones. Internalizing color consciousness, blacks promote the idea that blacks with dark skin and kinky hair are less attractive and worth less.
1865: Slavery ends, but whites look upon black women who style their hair like white women as well-adjusted. “Good” hair becomes a prerequisite for entering certain schools, churches, social groups and business networks.
Madame C.J. Walker
1880: Metal hot combs, invented in 1845 by the French, are readily available in the United States. The comb is heated and used to press and temporarily straighten kinky hair.
1900s: Madame C.J. Walker develops a range of hair-care products for black hair. She popularizes the press-and-curl style. Some criticize her for encouraging black women to look white.
1910: Walker is featured in the Guinness Book of Records as the first American female self-made millionaire.
1920s: Marcus Garvey, a black nationalist, urges followers to embrace their natural hair and reclaim an African aesthetic.
1954: George E. Johnson launches the Johnson Products Empire with Ultra Wave Hair Culture, a “permanent” hair straightener for men that can be applied at home. A women’s chemical straightener follows.
Bun1962: Actress Cicely Tyson wears cornrows on the television drama “East Side/West Side.”
1966: Model Pat Evans defies both black and white standards of beauty and shaves her head.
1968: Actress Diahann Carroll is the first black woman to star in a television network series, “Julia.” She is a darker version of the all-American girl with straightened, curled hair.
1970: Angela Davis becomes an icon of Black Power with her large afro.
1971: Melba Tolliver is fired from the ABC affiliate in New York for wearing an afro while covering Tricia Nixon’s wedding.
1977: The Jheri curl explodes on the black hair scene. Billed as a curly perm for blacks, the ultra-moist hairstyle lasts through the 1980s.
1979: Braids and beads cross the color line when Bo Derek appears with cornrows in the movie “10.”
Diahann Carroll
1980: Model-actress Grace Jones sports her trademark flat-top fade.
1988: Spike Lee exposes the good hair/bad hair light-skinned/dark-skinned schism in black American in his movie “School Daze.”
1990: “Sisters love the weave,” “Essence” magazine declares. A variety of natural styles and locks also become more accepted.
1997: Singer Erykah Badu poses on the cover of her debut album “Baduizm” with her head wrapped, ushering in an eclectic brand of Afrocentrism.
1998: Carson Inc., creator of Dark & Lovely and Magic Shave for black men, acquires the black-owned beauty company Johnson Products of Chicago in 1998. L’Oreal purchases Carson two years later and merges it with Soft Sheen.
1999: “People” magazine names lock-topped Grammy award-winning artist Lauryn Hill one of its 50 Most Beautiful People. 
2001: Rapper Lil’ Kim wears a platinum blonde weave, while singer Macy Gray sports a new-school afro. Some black women perm, some press, and others go with natural twists, braids and locks.
2003: New Bedford, Mass. Dance teacher Amy Fernandes’ refuses to allow 4-year-old Amari Diaw to participate in her ballet dance recital along with the other children in her class who have been practicing for the exciting event because she requires the girls to pull back their hair into a bun. Amari’s mom put Amari’s very curly hair into cornrows and pulled it back into a bun. Fernandes, however, insisted that the braids be removed and that Amari’s hair be pulled back straight into a bun.
2006: Baltimore Police Department’s new, more rigid professional appearance standards prohibit such hairstyles as cornrows, dreadlocks and twists. These natural hairstyles are deemed to be “extreme” and a “fad” by the department.
2007: MSNBC Radio Host Don Imus loses his job when he calls the Rutgers’ women’s basketball team “some nappy-headed hos.”
2006: Black hair-care is a billion-dollar industry.
2008: “The New Yorker” draws heat when a cover photo portrays Michelle Obama with an Afro and an AK 47 machine gun and and Barack Obama in a turban doing the fist bump. Many felt the cartoon reinforces negative stereotypes about both Muslims and natural hair.

An Interview with Ranelle

  
                                               


What do you do?
I'm a Junior Benefit Coordinator. 

How long have you been natural?
I've been transitioning for a little over a year and did my big chop, so been fully natural for about a month and change.

Why did you decide to go natural?
It started out as a little challenge to myself to see how long I can go without a perm, then a friend of mine referred me to a natural hair website in conversation, and after doing research I decided that I wanted to grow out my hair mainly out of curiosity at first.

What was the initial feedback/ attitudes towards your
hair change?
The feedback was mostly negative most people didn’t really understand what I was trying to do and why I wanted to change the hair that looked just fine already

Have these opinions changed over time? What are current opinions? 

For my friends the opinions have definitely changed they’re so supportive and actually prefer me with my natural hair. On the side of my family the reception is still and probably always will be negative especially within the past month when I did my big chop the reception to my natural hair choice has become worse. Also comments have been made by other black women about their disapproval of my hair. In general majority of the support has come from people outside my race sadly

Would you perm your hair again?
I wont say never BUT I really have no intentions of perming my hair again. 

Do you feel less attractive?
I haven’t really had any issues in the dating the dept since, where my hair is concerned. I won’t lie it’s a constant struggle. Some days I wake up and look at my hair and feel gorgeous and some days I want to hide under a hat. I've been raised that a woman's hair is her beauty so now that I don’t really have any I question my attractiveness at times but I know it’s all in my head. I'm beautiful http://static.ak.fbcdn.net/images/blank.gif

Has your hair change caused any professional Barriers or issues?
When I started this job I was transitioning so I was still able (be it barely) "traditionally professional" look at the time of my interview. Since I’ve been fully natural there have been no comments or change in the attitudes towards me from my bosses and/or the CEO of my company. I think it’s very possible to be natural and professional. We are still caught up in this notion of black hair being nappy so as naturals we get concerned if we're sending the wrong message by being in our natural state. Natural hair is becoming more mainstream; women with natural hair are now being featured in TV and print ads and are able to display their hair for the world to see. The times are changing slowly and one day this hopefully will be an issue of the past.

Naomi's Answers




What do you do? 
Enrollment Coordinator for a University- Speacializing in Public High Schools and Ministry Specialist 

How long have you been natural?
7 years 

Why did you decide to go natural?
Because my hair needed a break and the up keep of perming was very expensive. 

What was the initial feedback/ attitudes towards your hair change?
Some were negative because people were used to a certain type of hairstyle or did not like natural hair. 
Positive when done uniquely or interested in just how my hair "does that" (curls lol) 

Have these opinions changed over time? What are current opinions?
Due to my professional arena I do not keep my natural hair out to much because it isn’t accepted cross culturally. So I weave my hair which seems to be acceptable to most. 

Would you perm your hair again?
No, probably not 

Do you feel less attractive?
Sometimes I don't when my hair isn’t at its best ... 

Has your hair change caused any professional Barriers or issues?
Yes, especially when I have it in its natural state ... nothing said out loud but in the way it’s looked at, addressed, or even questions when are you getting your hair done. Close co-workers who have dealt with the same thing have told me it may be best to weave or perm my hair. Some in the work place view it as being too ethnic. 

Narkie's Answers


What do you do? 
RN

How long have you been natural?
15yrs

Why did you decide to go natural?
I got a bad perm and my hair broke. So intitially it was only suppposed to be until the broken part grew back. Then I just became commited to keeping it natural

What was the initial feedback/ attitudes towards your hair change?
I definately got several questions as to why I stopped perming my hair and when I was going to perm it. Do I think any man is going to want a woman with picky hair.

Have these opinions changed over time?
I definately believe opinions have changed I think mostly because of the texture of my hair and how it looks. I think within our own race we discriminate against each other with (Who has longer hair? who has pretty hair?).

Would you perm your hair again?
I've come this far not sure that I'd turn back now to perm.

Do you feel less attractive?
I've found that when I was in highschool natural hair was not attractive. Even the girls with perm that needed a touch up because of new growth couldn't get play until they had a fresh perm. As I have gotten older there is a better appreciation from men towards women that have natural hair. As long as it looks good.

Has your hair change caused any professional Barriers or issues?
I have not had any professional barriers with my hair. 

An Interview with Kathy





What do you do?
Home school my children/Stay at home wife/mother

How long have you been natural?
3 years

Why did you decide to go natural?
Spiritually felt a need to transform myself mentally and physically and appreciate the way God made me.

What was the initial feedback/ attitudes towards your hair change?
My husband loved it and I got all positive responses from those close to me.

Have these opinions changed over time?
The only change has been within myself. Sometimes I feel over welmed with the amount of hair I have to deal with, I have 3 daughters that are also natural.

Would you perm your hair again?
Sometimes I think yes, but deep down I know I only want the convenience and ease that I had, but spiritually I know that I have been blessed with God's helo to continue to press on, because nothing good comes easyhttp://static.ak.fbcdn.net/images/blank.gif.

Do you feel less attractive?
No. I personally think I am so much prettier natural then I was when I was permed. My husband also encourages me to stay natural because he likes it more than when I was permed.

Has your hair change caused any professional Barriers or issues?
Doesn't apply to me.

Friday 24 February 2012

Leigh-Anne Provides Answers




What do you do? 
I am an Education Coordinator 

 How long have you been natural? 
I have been natural for 2 years

Why did you decide to go natural? 

I decided to go natural because I wanted to stop putting harsh chemicals in my hair. And my hair was breaking and thinning out.

What was the initial feedback/ attitudes towards your hair change? 

I got a lot of "whys" from females. And they were saying that its going to be hard to manage.

Have these opinions changed over time? 

Yes, a lot of the opinions have changed. I have been getting a lot of compliments and a lot of the young girls at my church have been asking me questions about how to go natural.

Would you perm your hair again? 

I would never perm my hair again. I have other options if I want to wear my hair straight. 

Do you feel less attractive? 

To tell you the truth I feel a lot more attractive if anything. I have been getting more compliments from the opposite sex than when I was wearing a perm.

Has your hair change caused any professional Barriers or issues?

My hair has not caused any professional barriers at all. A lot of my co-workers have complimented me on my natural hair. They always say "I love your waves and curls, wish my hair could do that".


Important Advice & Product Info Links

Afrobeautyful 

Curly Nikki

Naturally Curly

Black Girl With Long Hair

Honey Fig

Approach2Link

Dar's Delectables


Feel free to add to this list ;)