Showing posts with label Japanese Hairstyles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese Hairstyles. Show all posts

Japanese short hairstyles for girls

Japanese Short Hairstles for women

Japanese hairstyles for teenage girls


Japanese haircuts are very popular among teenage girls. These are some of the latest hairstyles for winter.

2010 Asian Hairstyles For Girls

The Asian hairstyle is dominated by the physical hair traits that are usually inherited by people born in Japan, Korea, China, and Southeast Asia. This ethnic group generally has very black and very straight hair. However, in each of the countries listed, there are varying attitudes toward hairstyles. China has only recently become liberated enough to allow colored hair to become popular, whereas Japan and Korea both often exceed the United States in the extremities to which hairstyles can be worn in either casual and business settings.


The Asian hairstyle, then, usually refers to what is being designed by Japanese and Korean stylists to manipulate the hair of their people. In China, adding curls or waves to the hair can still be quite a radical move in some areas of the country.



In Japan and Korea, metallic extensions, electric lights, and other playful extremes can be enjoyed in almost any setting one can find. The basic tension of the Asian hairstyle is the pull of the exotic away the universality of the inherited black straight hair.


When a Japanese girl resolves to gets her hair colored, it is not unusual to see her go for a neon glow or a multicolored extravaganza in her bid to escape the ordinary straight black look all around her. A muted approach can be found on women who have had a chance to try several different looks, and here you will find tints, waves, and delicate touches that are styled to her face’s bone structure, rather than what looks different.

Japanese Anime Hairstyles

Japanese Anime Hairstyles

A young Girl with Japanese Anime Hairstyle

Cute Japanese Anime Hairstyle



Japanese Anime inspired Hairstyles have never been out of style ever since they got caught by the public eyes. It's very popular among Asians other than Japanese people and also among Westerners who likes to watch anime cartoons. There's a lot of Japanese Anime hairstyles that can look good on you depending on your skin color and the shape of your face like these hairstyles below.

Japanese Traditional Ofuku Hairstyles


Ofuku hairdo is the famous Japanese hairstyle. Ofuku hairdo is also called as split peach and momoware hairstyle. Ofuku hairstyle is used for the long hairs. In the ofuku hairstyle the large amount of decorations is required which give pleasant looking. Ofuku is beautiful hairstyle and decorated with interesting variety of kanzashi. The twist is split and red fabric natural fiber in the center. The tegarami is triangular shape which is pinned to the underneath of the mage and ofuku hair style is conventional hair style.


Ofuku hair style is famous from its distinct look, in the ofuku a toned down form with the knot worn lower which signified the maiko's loss of virginity. Ofuku hairstyle is diffucult to achieve and this hairstyle is look good on special event

Showing posts with label Ofuku Hairstyle. Show all posts Showing posts with label Ofuku Hairstyle. Show all posts Japanese Ofuku Hairstyle

Ofuku hairdo is the famous Japanese hairstyle. Ofuku hairdo is also called as split peach and momoware hairstyle. Ofuku hairstyle is used for the long hairs. In the ofuku hairstyle the large amount of decorations is required which give pleasant looking. Ofuku is beautiful hairstyle and decorated with interesting variety of kanzashi. The twist is split and red fabric natural fiber in the center. The tegarami is triangular shape which is pinned to the underneath of the mage and ofuku hair style is conventional hair style.

Ofuku hair style is famous from its distinct look, in the ofuku a toned down form with the knot worn lower which signified the maiko's loss of virginity. Ofuku hairstyle is diffucult to achieve and this hairstyle is look good on special event.



Yasunari Kawabata, the first Japanese to win the nobel prize (1968) once wrote "If for no other reason than to preserve traditional hairstyles, the geisha's existance is vital. I wonder how and when these hairstyles developed."
"Japanese men, as a rule, feel about a woman's neck and throat about the same way as men in the west feel about a woman's legs. This is why geisha wear the collars of their kimono so low in the back...I suppose that its like a woman in Paris wearing a short skirt." Sayuri, in 'Memoirs of a Geisha' by Aurthur Golden.