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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 88

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
88
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

88 SATURDAY 22.10.22 The Guardian LIFESTYLE A IR A A A A A A A A I I A IL IR IQ Height matters all the better for achieving that high-impact waterfall ect ntil this summer, footballer haircuts were all about fades and braids, undercuts and bleached tips. Jack curtains, Mario mohawk, David gelled spikes But when football fi nally came home it was wearing a swishy blonde ponytail. Captain Leah Williamson, Chloe Kelly, Alex Greenwood and Ellie Roebuck were just four of the Lionesses who made a ponytail their signature look at the Euros. On the magic day of the fi nal, ponytails bounced through Wembley as England pogo ed in delight. The Lioness ponytail was high energy and no nonsense.

Wearing a ponytail for sport is functional, but with a kick to it. (Ballerinas, who require a style that is functional yet serene, style their hair in buns instead.) But while the scraped-back sporty pony was winning football trophies, a diff erent vibe of ponytail vertiginous, all the better for that high-impact waterfall eff ect. The Lioness ponytail is a little lower but still above the ears, because this is the best way to keep the front strands back when running. The clean- girl pony is worn lower still, the same height as your nose because the vibe is all about balance and simplicity. A low, nape-of-the-neck pony is the most grown -up kind.

This version works with a black sweater and ballet pumps, for an Audrey Hepburn kind of energy. You lose the Tiggerish bounce at this height, so this is a look for the woman who prefers to glide. The pony can be a hundred diff erent hairstyles because, in the end, not really a hairstyle at all. an attitude. What other style can you do at your desk, without a mirror, just by yanking your hair off your face with an elastic band The ponytail is a shortcut for when got stuff to do, places to be.

It will never be as elegant as a chignon or as intricate as a French plait, but it is a winner every time. From Barbie to Lionesses, the ponytail celebrates feminine energy Photography: Tom Johnson. Styling: Melanie Wilkinson STYLE has been showing up on stadium stages and cinema screens. The Barbiecore trend a precursor to next Barbie movie has helped make the ponytail as much a party look Gen pin-ups from Ariana Grande to Bella Hadid, Hailey Bieber to Megan Thee Stallion have adopted a Hollywood version of the ponytail, in which hair is slicked upward and backward to the crown, precision- raked and lacquered to the skull with lashings of hairspray. The hair cascading from the ponytail is back combed at the base and fl at- ironed into a mirror shine.

This is high maintenance and highly sexed, an after-dark look. The ponytail celebrates feminine energy. It was born when teenagers were invented, in the late 1940s and 50s. Both the Lioness ponytail and the Barbie version are a fl exed bicep, but for feminine power rather than masculine hulk. That mean that men work a pony.

From Antonio Banderas to Brad Pitt to Chris Hemsworth the pony has a long heritage among Hollywood leading men. But the feminine energy the fact that they look, well, pretty is very much part of the point. Its latest incarnation is as part of the clean-girl aesthetic very big on TikTok which is about minimalist but considered clothes (a blazer, jeans, a pristine white T-shirt) and hair worn tied back to showcase the peachy skin that you have if a) you follow one of endless skincare routines and b) you are young enough to be doing stuff because TikTok tells you to. Height matters when it comes to ponytails. The Barbie is the most Jess Cartner-Morley On trends.

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About The Guardian Archive

Pages Available:
1,157,493
Years Available:
1821-2024