![]() These hairdos in the 18th century got so enormous that on a windy or rainy day, you would need something to protect them. Marie Antoinette used to dress up as a shepherdess, along with her friends, because she had an entire little farm village constructed in the grounds of Versailles, so she and her friends could pretend they were poor. The hat on the left was extremely popular in the 18th century, in the summer. The hats had to be big because the hairdos were so big. Figuratively, the novelty hat that incorporated everything – bows and flowers and ostrich feathers, was extremely popular. Hats were either big figuratively or big literally. No wonder satirist made fun of these hairdos and hats.Īnd they went along with novelty hats. The Belle-Poule was the name of a French military ship that was being honored in this hairdo, an incredibly high, powdered hairdo with a model ship incorporated at the top. Her natural hair is teased and pulled over fake hair to give that enormous beehive, with fake rolls, probably, added at the side and flowers and feathers and this and that.īut sometimes, these coiffures would become incredibly high and spectacular, kind of ridiculous.īut none was as silly as the Belle-Poule, debuted by Mary Antoinette herself. And on the right, you can see a hairdo for special occasions. In the picture on the left, there is a pretty good and very accurate reconstruction of what everyday hair was like for the fashionable women of the 18th century. ![]() Their hair would be powdered white, but occasionally, also it would be tinted with those blues or purples. Instead, fashionable women would coif their natural hair and then add hairpieces and fake curls and lots of false hair to give height for high-fashion events and to sport the “novelty coifs” of the era. During the 18th century, it was simply called a “cocked hat”.Ĭontrary to popular belief, 18th-century women seldom wore full wigs. Interestingly, it wasn't called a tricorn hat until about 100 years after people wore it. The hat of the entire 18th century was a tricorn hat. The ponytail on both a buckled wig and on natural hair also has a name, it was called a “queue”. Some men, however, couldn't be bothered with all of this and they just grew their natural hair out to their shoulders and then tied it in a ponytail at the back. They were usually brown and then powdered white. Wigs were not white, they were not made of white hair, as some people may believe. They had these two large peaks at the top, and such wigs are called “allonge wigs”.īut then, very quickly appeared another type of wigs called “buckled wigs” or “buckled clubbed wigs”. Wigs at the beginning of the 18th century were very similar to the full bottom wigs from the end of the 17th century. Powder would sometimes be tinted as well – tinted blue or violet or purple, just to shake things up a bit. What was it made of? At the lower end of the spectrum, it was made out of things like cornstarch, but the real fashionistas used very finely milled and scented flour. Powder was either applied with a sort of a flicky brush or with a mechanical pump (far more efficient). Fashionable people would hold one of these creepy-looking cones up to their faces when their hair was being powdered so that the powder wouldn't get into their eyes or ruin the rest of that makeup. What he is holding up to his face is a powder cone. No, he is not wearing some weird serial killer mask. The article is based on a video by Amanda Hallay, fashion historian But let’s see the advantages and drawbacks of this era’s lifestyle. So, romantic 18th-century fashion trends are not that romantic at all actually. The aristocrats preferred several meters high wigs and hairdos, false teeth pulled out of corpse’s mouth, and fake eyebrows made from mouse skin. Until the very end of the century, natural shapes, silhouettes, and features were out of fashion. ![]() This period is known for its artificialness in fashion and lifestyle. ![]() In this article, we're going to look at the 18th-century hair and makeup.
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