hidden pixel

French Braid Information

A French braid, or French plait, is a type of braided hairstyle.

Contents

Description

Unlike the simplest form of three-strand braid, in which all of the hair is initially divided into three sections which are simultaneously gathered together near the scalp (also known as an "English braid"), a French braid starts with three small sections of hair near the crown of the head; these initial sections are braided together toward the nape of the neck, gradually adding more hair to each section as it crosses in from the side into the center of the braid structure. The final result incorporates all of the hair into a smoothly woven pattern over the scalp. If the main mass of hair is initially parted into two or more sections along the scalp that are kept separate from one another, multiple French braids may be created, each in its own section.

Compared to the simplest form of hair braid, a French braid has several practical advantages: it can restrain hair from the top of the head that is too short to reach the nape of the neck, and it spreads the weight and tension of the braid across a larger portion of the scalp. Its sleeker appearance is also sometimes viewed as more elegant and sophisticated. However, a French braid is more difficult to construct than a simple braid because of its greater complexity; when performed on one's own hair, it also requires a more prolonged elevation of the hands above the back of the head, and leaves more tangled hair along the scalp when unbraiding.

In this style of braid start on top of the head and braid it till the end of the hair. Braiding in this manner can be done with different braid types but the most popular are the classic type and the fishtail type.[1]

History

It is unclear when the hairstyle originated, or how it became associated with France in the English-speaking world; in the French language, the same hairstyle is called tresse africaine ("African braid") or tresse indienne ("Indian braid").[2][3]

The phrase "French braid" appears in an 1871 issue of Arthur's Home Magazine, used in a piece of short fiction that describes it as a new hairstyle ("...do up your hair in that new French braid...").[4] However, no visual illustrations are provided for that context, making it impossible to tell whether it refers to the same hairstyle described above.

Variations

Variations on this hairstyle include:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Braid Guide with Explanations of Braids/French Braid"
  2. ^ "French Braid, post #2"
  3. ^ "Coiffure du jour: tresse indienne ou africaine/French braid"
  4. ^ March Westland (1871). "Our New Congressman". Arthur's home magazine 37-38: 222–223. http://books.google.com/books?id=g3AAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA223&dq=french+braid+hair.
  5. ^ "Chapter LX.-- The Hair. Part I-- Arrangement. 888. Fillets". Ward and Lock's Home Book: a Domestic Encyclopædia Forming a Companion Volume to "Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management".: 538–539. 1882. http://books.google.com/books?id=VKECAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA539#v=onepage&q=&f=false.
  6. ^ Braiding and Plaiting Your Horse Retrieved 2010-2-20

External links

Human hair
List of hairstyles ‎ · List of facial hairstyles
Body type Lanugo · Androgenic · Terminal · Vellus
Hairstyles Afro textured hair · Afro · Artificial hair integrations · Asymmetric cut · Backcombing · Beehive · Big hair · Blowout · Bob cut · Bouffant · Bowl cut · Braid or Plait · Bun · Odango · Bunches · Butch cut · Buzz cut · Caesar cut · Chonmage · Comb over · Conk · Cornrows · Crew cut · Crop · Croydon facelift · Curly hair · Curtained hair · Devilock · Dice Bob · Dido flip · Digital perm · Dreadlocks · Duck's Ass · Dutch braid · Emo Hair · Fauxhawk · Feathered hair · Finger wave · Flattop · Fontange · French twist · Bangs / Fringe · Highlights · High and tight · Hime cut · Historical Christian hairstyles · Hi-top fade · Induction cut · Jarhead · Jewfro · Jheri curl · Layered hair · Liberty spikes · Long hair · Mohawk · Mop-Top · Mullet · Oseledets · Pageboy · Part · Perm · Pigtail · Pixie cut · Pompadour · Ponytail · Quiff · "The Rachel" · Rattail · Razor cut · Ringlet · Shag · Shape-Up · Spiky hair · Straight hair · Tonsure · Updo · Waves
Facial hair Beard · Chin curtain · Chinstrap · Goatee · Handlebar moustache · Moustache · Neckbeard · Shenandoah · Sideburns · Soul patch · Stubble · Toothbrush moustache · Van Dyke
Other areas Head · Underarm · Chest · Abdominal · Pubic · Leg · Nose
Hair loss Baldness · Glabrousness · Hair removal (waxing · threading · laser · IPL · chemical · electric) · Shaving (head · leg) · Razor
Conditions Alopecia · Hypertrichosis · Trichophilia · Trichotillomania
Related Hairstyle · Hairdresser · Barber · Long hair · Hair color · Bearded lady
Category: Hair

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Thu May 3 12:16:56 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.



Matching Results for French Braid:

Braid
She didn't mind his screams and his shrieks, to the way he yanked painfully on her braid to make her stop. He was too little to know better." "She picked him up and hugged ...

Far Cry 2
You know; French guns, Dutch, Belgian... They're not bio-degradable. Only the dead are bio-degradable. What's the difference? Same job, really. You get up, you get on the ...

Love
Edmond de Goncourt (1822-96) and Jules de Goncourt (1830-70), French writers. ... the sighs of her veils, why everyone did not go mad with the movements of her braid ...


from: Wikiquote: french braid,
Fri Apr 13 21:47:33 2012