Vidal Sassoon used his hairstyling shears to free women from
beehives and hot rollers and give them wash-and-wear cuts that made him
an international name in hair care.
When he came on the scene in the 1950s, hair was high and heavy _
typically curled, teased, piled and shellacked into place. Then came the
1960s, and Sassoon's creative cuts, which required little styling and
fell into place perfectly every time, fit right in with the fledgling
women's liberation movement.
"His timing was perfect: As women's hair was liberated, so were their
lives," Allure magazine Editor-in-Chief Linda Wells told The Associated
Press in a written statement. "Sassoon was one of the original
feminists."
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1 comment:
Couldn't care less. Waste of time reading it. Thanks
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