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New Ways with the Hair

One of the pioneers of the triangular hair-parting is Miss Audrey Belfield, Sir Cecil Harcourt-Smith’s young niece, who is one of the August stay-at-homes in London. This is due to the success of her hair-dressing salon, where women sit at pale green dressing-tables to have their hair curled and dressed. The triangular parting is to be accompanied by the parting behind the ear instead of in front of it, and in some cases, where a woman has a particularly well-shaped head, in the middle of the back of the head, with no front parting at all. Miss Belfield, after studying the autumn high hats, has decided that the fashionable little flat curls must be placed high upon the head, with the ears exposed, and the whole coiffure drawn back from the face instead of forward.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19341107.2.24.2

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 22472, 7 November 1934, Page 5

Word Count
140

New Ways with the Hair Southland Times, Issue 22472, 7 November 1934, Page 5

New Ways with the Hair Southland Times, Issue 22472, 7 November 1934, Page 5