vocehaircare:

“The Best Is Yet To Come” by Eric Mistretta. A fresh hairstyle for spring 2013!
VOCE’ HAIRCARE……………WE GIVE YOUR HAIR ALL THE OPTIONS!
13th May 201319:3827 notes
jomohair:

JOMOHAIR:  Sonya Cark #4
Part by Sonya Clark.  The medium used is hair.
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muhindi:

Photographed by Daniel Muhindi 
13th May 201319:219 notes
1stchronicles:

“Hairstyling is a form of art. When you see a hairstylist do this or that, every single movement is precise and rapid. She creates a hairstyle the way a sculptor would work - from nothing. It’s fascinating.” - J.D. Okhai Ojeikere
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NAGI NODA
13th May 201319:1522 notes
whittemorehouse:

Hair comet.  Nuff said.
13th May 201319:127 notes
‘Loose Ends’ by Suvan Geer. Altered book with human hair. 1999. On display at ‘PAGES’.
13th May 201319:115 notes
ladiesupfront:

Crying in Art, Part 12
Memorial for Henry G. Staats ca. 1802 Artist: Unknown Lelia A. and John Hill Morgan, B.A. 1893, LL.B. 1896, M.A. (Hon.) 1929, Collectionh 1940.534 In style and technique, this striking memorial resembles others executed around 1802 in or near Albany, New York. The miniature descended in the Albany-area Staats and Cuyler families. A comparison of the initials inscribed on the mourning locket to family genealogies tells a story—all too familiar to early American parents—of infant deaths. Henry Staats, born on January 16, 1802, and christened the following month at the First Dutch Reformed Church of Albany, figuratively rests in the tomb, inscribed on the plinth “HGS.” On the reverse, cut-gold initials probably stand for his brother Richard Cuyler, born earlier on July 16, 1800, and remembered by locks of plaited hair. The initials of their mother, Catherine Cuyler Staats, are engraved at the top of the locket’s reverse. While no records of the boys’ deaths have been found, the birth of a son christened Richard Henry in 1803 suggests that his parents bravely named him after his deceased brothers. The figure of a weeping woman dressed in black and partially veiled by willow boughs painted on the lens’s reverse captures the family’s grief at the loss of two young sons.
13th May 201319:095 notes
Opaque  by  andbamnan