Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting discussion, because I think that many of the aging actresses in Hollywood who continue to wear hair down to their waists (most of them with extensions) would look far, far better with hair cut to above their shoulders. (I'm looking at you SJP, Demi, Nicole).
Agreed. Hair past the bra strap doesn't really look good after high school--it's a very, very young look.
Maybe if your isn't healthy. But SJP, and also Amal Clooney, have fabulous long hair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting discussion, because I think that many of the aging actresses in Hollywood who continue to wear hair down to their waists (most of them with extensions) would look far, far better with hair cut to above their shoulders. (I'm looking at you SJP, Demi, Nicole).
Agreed. Hair past the bra strap doesn't really look good after high school--it's a very, very young look.
Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting discussion, because I think that many of the aging actresses in Hollywood who continue to wear hair down to their waists (most of them with extensions) would look far, far better with hair cut to above their shoulders. (I'm looking at you SJP, Demi, Nicole).
Anonymous wrote:Very few women can pull short hair attractively in middle age.
Very few women actually have hair so fine they "need" a short cut. My mother had baby fine, feathery hair and did need such a cut. But most women don't have that texture until much later, if they ever have it at all. Usually women feel their hair thinning, and the comparison makes them believe a short cut is best. But if they saw themselves objectively, they'd realize longer hair still suits them better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do older women get their haircut short when that exposes their necks and necks show age? And is it because their hair gets thin, they think it makes them look better, or they want less hassle of washing it?
How are you defining “older women”?
Why do I care if my aging neck is exposed? Do you consider it indecent?
I’m in my 50s, and my hair is halfway down my back. It is thick and frizzy, so twisted into a bun every day. Short hair is a nuisance to deal with. A neighbor/family friend wore a bun well into her 80s when her arthritis made it too painful, and I always admired her style.
How is short hair a nuisance? It is much easier to have shorter hair...less time washing it and you brush and go. And honestly, you wear your hair however you want it. But to say short hair is more work is not true.
Anonymous wrote:I still have a ton of hair although the texture has changed since menopause. I wear it super short now because I cannot be arsed with hair styling, makeup, and of that crap anymore. I wash my face with very good retinol soap and apply moisturizer and use a tiny bit of eyeliner and an eyelash curler and lip gloss and that is all I can be arsed to do.
It makes me laugh now and again because my mother always wanted me in short hair (it suits my face) and I always wanted it longer my whole childhood so I wore it long for years after I came under my own control. It’s ironic that once I came entirely under my own control - free of biological reproductive urges - I was happy to embrace a haircut so short that my entire styling regime is one minute of rubbing in some bed head type styling produce and letting it dry however it wants.
Every day that I am post menopausal I love my body and face more than ever before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 58. My hair is naturally wavy and I still have a lot of it. I straighten it about half the time. Barring a major health issue, I have no plans to cut my hair short enough that I can’t pull it up. Even my hairdresser says short hair would be way more work for me based on my hair type.
I don’t wear it as long as I did in my 20s and 30s but that’s a personal preference, not pressure to follow an unwritten rule about long hair on older women. I keep it around my shoulders or just below these days.
55 with very thick hair. Below shoulders. I have never had short hair. I would look awful given my head size and face shape.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep longer hair as I have a face shape that looks bad with short or chin length hair. Hairdressers put on their old lady glasses and only want to cut a pixie or a bob on me. I just put it up in a Ficcare clip and don't bother with hairdressers. They hate older women's hair. I've seen too many hefty older women with short unflattering pixies to bother with what is acceptable or not.
So much judgement in your post. It is sad when women become more judgemental than men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 58. My hair is naturally wavy and I still have a lot of it. I straighten it about half the time. Barring a major health issue, I have no plans to cut my hair short enough that I can’t pull it up. Even my hairdresser says short hair would be way more work for me based on my hair type.
I don’t wear it as long as I did in my 20s and 30s but that’s a personal preference, not pressure to follow an unwritten rule about long hair on older women. I keep it around my shoulders or just below these days.
+1
This describes me too. I almost always wear my hair in a ponytail, so it has to be at least long enough to pull it back. I do think it would be more work if I had shorter hair that couldn't be pulled into a ponytail. It would have to be styled every day and I'm not up for it.
Dp. It is not 'more work' to have short hair! Since when did having less of something take more time?
I don't care what you do with your hair..no judgement but I have short hair and do not style it every day! That is very funny!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do older women get their haircut short when that exposes their necks and necks show age? And is it because their hair gets thin, they think it makes them look better, or they want less hassle of washing it?
How are you defining “older women”?
Why do I care if my aging neck is exposed? Do you consider it indecent?
I’m in my 50s, and my hair is halfway down my back. It is thick and frizzy, so twisted into a bun every day. Short hair is a nuisance to deal with. A neighbor/family friend wore a bun well into her 80s when her arthritis made it too painful, and I always admired her style.