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Tuesday, February 09, 2010
15 Facts You Didn't Know About Human Hair

Ever wonder what a monk's hairstyle is called? How about the name for the fear of hair? This article contains plenty of fun facts about human hair -- some of which might surprise you!

 

1. Ever notice how pre-20th Century military leaders like Andrew Jackson and Ulysses S. Grant had long, flowing locks and full beards? That's because the trend favoring short hair on uniformed men didn't begin until the World War I, when trench warfare created a breeding ground for lice. Since then, military men have cropped their hair close to their scalps.

2. The myth that human hair and fingernails continue to grow after we die is just that - a myth. Decomposition only makes it appear that way.

3. Human hair likes company: Your head has anywhere from 90,000 to 150,000 hairs on it.

4. Human hair can't stand too much dandruff shampoo. Because of this, you should use such products only when you need them. Otherwise you risk damaging your hair and scalp, and even creating more dandruff.

5. If your hair feels oily, it's because of an excess of sebum, a fatty oil that's produced at the base of each human hair follicle.

6. Liberty spikes - the long, stiff, often multicolored spikes of hair popular within the punk subculture - can't be achieved with conventional hair products. Many enthusiasts use egg whites or even Elmer's glue to get the desired stiffness.

7. Just today, your scalp will shed about a hundred hairs.

8. For every human, hair is the fastest growing tissue on the body.

9. On the television show Arrested Development, Ed Begley Jr. portrayed a character suffering fromalopecia universalis - a complete lack of any human hair. Another such character is Judge Holden in the Cormac McCarthy novel Blood Meridian.

10. The world's longest documented human hair can be found atop the head of Xie Quiping of Guangxi Province in China. Her hair is just under eighteen and a half feet long.

11. Human hair isn't the only kind of hair subject to baldness. Primates such as the chimpanzee and the stump-tailed macaque sometimes develop pattern baldness after adolescence.

12. If you have chaetophobia, you may want to take a trip to the barber. Chaetophobia is the fear of hair.

13. In the Sherlock Holmes story The Red-Headed League, Arthur Conan Doyle describes a bank robber's plot to distract a red-headed pawnshop clerk by offering him a high-paying job based solely on the color of his hair. The purpose? To keep him out of the pawnshop while the robber tunnels through its cellar to a bank vault next door.

14. The main component of human hair is keratin, which is also found in gazelle horns, reptile scales, tortoise shells, and - very probably - the defensive armor of dinosaurs like Stegosaurus and Ankylosaurus.

15. The name for the shaved-scalp hairstyle popular with monks is a tonsure.

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Tuesday, February 09, 2010
Denim Jacket Revival

I"ve had a denim jacket for years, and I almost never wear it. Sometimes I get jacket envy when I see cool girls wearing denim jackets on street style blogs, which is totally irrational because I happen to have practically the same jacket these girls are wearing. What I really envy is the fact that, unlike me, they actually wear the jacket. I appear to lack this ability. When I see these girls wearing flannel and denim it looks great, but somehow, standing in front of the mirror in the morning, the pairing doesn"t quite have the same flair. On me, it looks plain and easy. I"d rather wear flannel and my leather jacket if I"m going down that route, because at least leather has a bit more of an edge. So the jacket hangs from its hook (or, to be honest, lies crumpled on my floor somewhere) and is rarely taken out for a spin.

What I"m getting at here is that I think I need to make some changes to my denim jacket in order to actually wear it. My first idea on the subject was studs - I mean, you know I love me some studded denim - but that feels so done these days. I see that everywhere. Ditto chopping off the sleeves and making the jacket a vest. Ditto bleaching it. So what"s to be done? I dipped into my inspiration folder and emerged victorious! Check out this lovely little jacket:

I believe the model is actually wearing a patched vest over a torn up jacket, but it"s the combo that gets me. I love the ditzy florals and the way the rips temper the girliness factor. I think something similar could even be done with lace, although I really am partial to the floral prints.
However, if I lose my nerve when it comes to making such a feminine addition to my jacket, I think I could make a slightly punkier compromise.

Now don"t get me wrong - the jacket is staying a jacket. I can"t quite tell what is going on in this picture - it appears that either there is some kind of denim corset or the denim is actually cut into strips and attached to a blazer - but I"m not really concerned with the details. I like the ragged, contrasting strips of fabric and even the lopsided stars.
I"ve been home from school for about a week, and I"m getting fairly bored. I think it"s about time for a new project. Denim jacket resuscitation time, perhaps?

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