YOUR CHILD'S PERSONALITY.
HOW TO DRESS THE HAIR. Each child has to bo carefully studied as an individual if her hair is to bo done in the most becoming way. Most mothers liko their children to have curls, and, for girls, curls are the general rule. The impulse that some mothers have, however, to coax their small son's hair into curls should bo sternly suppressed. Boys' hairs must be cut straight and rather short, with a side parting. The popular stylo for little girls is a long, wavy shingle, parted at either left or right side, with a short fringe across the forehead to cover the gap between the hair on either side. It suits the oval faco of the average little schoolgirl. A style for the quaint and more un-usual-looking child comes from Paris. The hair is taken right back from the forehead without a parting, and a thin fringe cut to fall about half-an-inch above the eyebrows. A narrow ribbon is then bound right round the head, under the hair at the back, over the hair at the front, covering the division between hair and fringe, and ending with a demure bow on one side.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 20490, 15 February 1930, Page 6 (Supplement)
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197YOUR CHILD'S PERSONALITY. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 20490, 15 February 1930, Page 6 (Supplement)
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