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***house cleaning note***
There were 3 threads on bangs. Now there is one
LD
There were 3 threads on bangs. Now there is one
LD
Smuterella said:who that?
Spiffy said:My big/high forehead is the main reason I want to get bangs...I'm thinking if I get eye-brow grazing ones, I can easily curl them up for when I want to go vintage, or leave them messy and natural for when I'm being more modern/lazy.
Something like this..
Any thoughts on how successful this style is? I want to get bangs cut like this, but am intimidated by their shortness. Bette Davis seems to have had bangs in only one film, so maybe they didn't go over well.
Resurrecting this thread for a bit. I've been trying my hand at faux bangs lately and I keep running into the same problem - my forehead. I have a high one, you see, (a five-head instead of four, as Tyra Banks would say) and when I go to pin the roll to my hairline, it ends up with the roll of bangs so high that it doesn't really look like bangs. It looks like, well, a roll right at my hairline. I've been trying to curl the bangs into a bigger circle, but then I run into the problem of not grasping enough of the hair at my hairline with the pin for the bang to be stable. My hair is fine so I can't create very much bulk at the front either.
Some of you may relate to this and know what I'm talking about, or maybe it's just me and my lack of dexterity. Any suggestions?
Resurrecting this thread for a bit. I've been trying my hand at faux bangs lately and I keep running into the same problem - my forehead. I have a high one, you see, (a five-head instead of four, as Tyra Banks would say) and when I go to pin the roll to my hairline, it ends up with the roll of bangs so high that it doesn't really look like bangs. It looks like, well, a roll right at my hairline. I've been trying to curl the bangs into a bigger circle, but then I run into the problem of not grasping enough of the hair at my hairline with the pin for the bang to be stable. My hair is fine so I can't create very much bulk at the front either.
Some of you may relate to this and know what I'm talking about, or maybe it's just me and my lack of dexterity. Any suggestions?
I don't have bangs either so when I want bumper bangs, I have to do faux too. I roll mine so they hang lower than the line...I also use a rat that I made which helps keep things in place so I don't have to use tons of pins and be readjusting all day. This way the only pins I have to use are one on each side to help cover the rat. Unless you're trying to get super big bumper bangs like Carmen Miranda, I notice that vintage bangs tend to sit just below the hair line.
How far back are you pulling hair from to make your bangs? I go the true vintage and make a V starting about halfway back from my forehead, which might give you a little more "oomph" in your roll. I've seen them also go farther back if you're a little more daring like some starlets did in Hollywood in the 40s.
Your bangs look great here. You're using the rat, I take? I need to make one of those. I haven't been sectioning off as much as hair as you have, or as the video Zombiegirl posted, not near as much. Might be something to that. I'm thinking some of this might be mental too. GI Jane, looking at your bang roll, mine is probably close to that as far as placement, but on my face, it seemed wrong. Flashbacks to my childhood where dozens of bad haircuts, stylists 'trimming' naturally kinky bangs when wet that shrunk up 75% when dry...ugh.
Thank you both for your suggestions. I'm going to have to try using more hair, a rat, and the twist-bang technique. Will post photos if I get something I like.