How To French Braid Hair
A
French braid or French plait, is a type of braided hairstyle. 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") This is what we teach at Maidenhead
Hairdressers.
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,
although as the French braid extends downward from the head it becomes indistinguishable from a normal
braid.
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
Maidenhead Hairdressers 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.
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").
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..."). However, no visual illustrations are provided for that context, making it impossible to tell
whether it refers to the same hairstyle described above or whether the term's usage has shifted since
then.
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