Thursday 18 June 2015

Vogue Trolls The Natural Hair Community With North West Curly Hair Post

Givenchy : Front Row - Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2015
Source: Michel Dufour / Getty
From Marie Claire praising Kylie Jenner for rocking “new epic” cornrows, to Mane Addicts calling Bantu knots mini buns, we just can’t catch a break. We being the Black women and girls who have been rocking natural hair for years.
And now, Vogue is trying to bring a baby into their willful obliviousness to what women with natural tresses deal with, and whom the natural community actually looks to for style cues when it comes to kinky and curly hair, even for their children.
The writer probably meant well, but it’s still annoying to read that North West is the new it girl inspiring a “new generation of natural hair girls,” as if having curly hair, or any of the styles we’ve seen Nori rock, when her hair is done, are new.
Mmmkay.
Here’s a snippet:

I’ve been charmed by the sleek styles that kim and Kanye’s offspring has sported as she sits front row at Fashion Week on her mother’s lap, arriving to ballet class in custom Balmain blazers, or globetrotting to far-flung locales on family trips. Whether a top bun or a comb-over, North’s pint-sized hair styles complement her fashion-forward play clothes, while remaining refreshingly easy and age-appropriate. They’ve established little Nori as a kind of hair icon for a nascent and diverse generation of tots rocking their natural curls with unprecedented flair—among them, my two-year-old niece, Isabel. 
Like Nori, Isabel (affectionately known as “Izzy B”) sprouts an enviable festoon of curls that are a reflection of her biracial background: Her mother is of Russian-Jewish descent and her father is African-American. Ever the hands-on “fashion auntie,” I’ve happily assisted Izzy’s mom with styling her little corkscrews, passing along a long familial tradition of black hair care that emphasizes detangling and moisture. When my sister-in-law doubted her ability to skillfully do her daughter’s hair on a daily basis, I offered encouragement: as I wrote here before, she is not alone in wanting to bring out the natural beauty of her mixed-race child.
And so, for some professional insight into how we could easily reproduce a day-to-day curly regimen at home, sans neuroses, I turned to Anthony Dickey, the famed curl whisperer behind the product line Hair Rules. Empowering parents in multiethnic or multicultural relationships to absorb information regarding their child’s natural hair care, rather than being intimidated by it, Dickey espouses: “Really believe your kid’s hair is much more reflective of a diverse world that we live in.”
I sent him four of North’s go-to looks: the top knot, the pom poms, the comb-over, and her free flying coils, as well as a pic of Izzy for reference, and we got to work. Rolling off a concise list of sulfate-, paraben-, and phthalate-free products that would be the bedrock of Izzy’s routine, Dickey sung the praises of a non-sudsing shampoo that won’t strip or dry out curly baby hair (Hair Rules Cleansing Cream Moisturizing No Suds Shampoo), leave-in conditioner for hold (TotLogic Leave-In Conditioning Spray for fine, flyaway curls; Mixed Chicks Leave-In Conditioner for spongier, kinkier textures), water to activate the curl, and clear latex rubber bands to help hold the styles without pulling at the root. A rat-tail comb was essential for making the precise parts, while a soft bristle brush would help smooth the flyways.
The idea was to create fun, carefree hair that brings out Izzy’s effervescent personality and suits her busy schedule of running around the playground with her teeny-tiny squad or pirouetting about ballet class, without imparting an unreasonable beauty standard that ultimately distracts from her all-too-important playtime. After all, even though North West may rule fashion’s most exclusive front rows, something tells me that rolling through the Charles de Gaulle Airport atop her Frozen suitcase was the highlight of her recent trip to Paris for the shows.
So…Nori is a hair icon for rocking styles that have existed for centuries?
Agian, the writer probably meant well, and good for them for seeking a professional, but start by not treating curly hair like it’s some cool new thing, and do some actual research beyond celebrity news sites now that you have a child of African descent to look after.

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