Friday, February 27, 2009

The Short Punk Hairstyles



















The Short Punk Hairstyles

The punk hairstyles have various characteristics such as the startling cuts, wild colors and even the funky hair styles. This style emerged in the 70’s. It became wide spread with the emergence of MTV.



Lots of punks dye their hair in bright, unnatural colors (vivid pinks, purples, putrid greens, electric blues and sunshine yellows). The main factor in deciding how to have the hair as a punk is anything not considered “normal”.

The Punk Hairstyles












The Punk Hairstyles
PUNK HAIRSTYLES: Your complete guide to punk hair styles for both girls and guys

Punk Hairstyle Punk subculture is what most of the punk fashions and punk hairstyles
depend on. It deals with the styles of clothing, cosmetics, hairstyles, body modifications and even jewelry. There are wide ranges of fashions which are present from the Vivienne Westwood styles to the styles and those modeled on different bands like The Exploited. The punk fashion is also influenced from various other cultures and art movements like the skinheads, rudeboys, glam rock, greasers, art school students and moods. Apart from those they are also influenced from other popular cultures too.

There are different types of quirky styles in punk and it could be adopted by anyone who would love to get noticed in the society. There are different types of punk hairstyles and all these are maintained by different aspects such as colour, style, cut etc.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Celebrity Patricia Arquette’s New nad Trendy Bob hairstyles

Celebrity Patricia Arquette’s chin-length bob with bangs

Patricia Arquette in a short bob hair style for the The 59th Annual Primetime EMMY Awards. This style looks cute


Patricia Arquette’s classic bob cut

Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Punk Style










The Punk Style
The industrial subculture was born as a mutated and futuristic form of the punk style. Generally, the new subculture seems like the old punk style. Specifically, the industrial has adapted the punk style to a more modern and futuristic semiotic field. One idea unifies the two subcultures – the chaos and the lack of control that they proudly flaunt. The punk represented the chaos in the near past, and industrial subculture is a continuation of the chaos in the future. It is a future where machines have more communication between each other than human beings do. It is a future, where the progress of technology and the lack of control take an important place. Punk and industrial subcultures consciously chose not to be part of the stereotype and the social norms. They want and they succeed in breaking them.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Latest Hot Prom Hairstyles

Bettie Bangs

Named after 1950s pinup girl Bettie Page (don’t worry if you’ve never heard of her), everyone from Katy Perry and Christina Aguilera to Dita von Teese (these references you know) is into these edgy bangs. To pull them off, create ringlets, pin back the sides, and keep the bangs blunt
Latest prom Hairstyles


Sleek Ponytails

Okay, so it’s not quite a down-do, but a high, super-sleek ponytail is way sexier than a stuffy updo. To really make your pony look prom-worthy, take a small strand of hair and wind it around the elastic; then fasten it just underneath the ponytail (out of sight) with a bobby pin or two.
Latest prom Hairstyles


Loose Waves

Forget full-on tendrils and take a cue from Britney, Taylor Swift, and Lindsay Lohan, who have all been seen sporting these soft, loose locks. The look is flirtier than straight hair, but you don’t have to commit to crazy curls.
Latest prom Hairstyles



Faux Bobs

Carrie Underwood has been spotted showing off this sexy, tousled ’do. It’s a perfect way to get a whole new look without a haircut.
Latest prom Hairstyles


Va Va Voom Waves

Want a hairdo that will really turn heads? We love the look of these glossy, voluminous waves. Remember to coat your curls with a bit of nongreasy shine serum so your hair stays bouncy and lustrous all night long (yep, we mean all through the after-party).
Latest prom Hairstyles


Haute Headbands

Headbands are definitely stealing the spotlight this prom season. It doesn’t matter whether your hair is straight or curly; a sparkly style will add some glitz and glamour to your down-do.



80s Crimp

Crimpers can be fun, but fight the urge to use the iron on your whole head: Remember this is prom, not Halloween. Simply style a couple of strands and keep the rest of your loose locks straight for a modern and -- dare we say totally awesome -- take on this retro style.


Half-Up With Height

Having trouble deciding if the down-do is really for you? Don’t stress. A half-updo (one with lots of lift) gives you the best of both worlds: a few loose strands to twirl and a no-fuss hairstyle that looks ultra-elegant.



Extreme Side Parts

Besides being totally sexy, a side-swept down-do is flattering for every face shape. To really spice up your look, try enhancing your eyes with smoky shadow.



Pinned-up Curls

Want a down-do that keeps the hair out of your eyes? Try teasing your bangs and pinning them back with a barrette for a simple and stunning hairstyle.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Punk Rocker





The Punk Rocker

Hang out at a UK punk gig today and you'd be hard pushed to describe what you see as anything other than some good old harmless fun in a genre that long since became another subsidiary of rock 'n' roll.

While punk has produced its fair share of careerists, traditionalists and spotty herberts, let's not forget it has produced a few genuinely provocative bands, from the MC5 and Crass to Fugazi and Refused. But that was then, this is now and it's easy to forget that punk still means something - and I don't mean your drunk Uncle Terry or that bloke who still hangs around the town centre in his Angelic Upstarts T-shirts. Instead, the spirit of punk as an anti-establishment force lives on today. You're just not likely to find it in the UK or the US.

Instead, punk is kept alive in places like Cuba where simply criticising the communist regime can get your ass thrown in jail. As has been reported, that's what has happened to Gorki Águila Carrasco, leader singer of Porno para Ricardo, currently facing four years in prison for "peligrosidad" - literally meaning the dangerousness of his music - specifically for dismissing the ruling Castro brothers as "geriatrics". It's hardly GG Allin is it? Maybe it was their vaguely wacky song 'El Comandante' that upset, um, El Comandante.

Elsewhere the appetite for punk rock grows unabated. Readers of Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel Persepolis or its film adaptation will know the type of trouble faced when caught with contraband punk music under the theocratic tyranny of Islamist fundamentalists in post-revolution Iran. And indeed, how that hunger for anti-social sounds merely grows when challenged. The Sex Pistols might be a joke today, but for millions of oppressed youth they still represent a signpost to freedom.

The perceived controversial nature of punk bands merely highlights the conservative world we're living in, where fundamentalist religious regimes or paranoid governments still perceive punk bands as threatening. Just ask Canadian punk band The Suicide Pilots, who have a government file on them for their name alone. Or ask leading Chinese punk band Hang On The Box, who have previously been denied visas to travel abroad after their government deemed their music an "inappropriate" export. Punk scenes exist in China, but bands have to tread carefully and make sure not to criticise their government. "We are good citizens who obey the law and love our country," said Li Qing of Chinese punk band Snapline, when asked about governmental intervention when interviewed in 2007. And do you know how hard it is locating a Gang Of Four record in North Korea?

Even UK punks aren't immune - when Mike Devine, guitarist with a Clash tribute band, texted his friend some lyrics from The Clash's 'Tommy Gun' the father of two was paid a visit by the Avon & Somerset Special Branch.

Ultimately, though, Western punk has got soft and largely apolitical thanks to us living in one of the freest countries in the world. Punk in America and Britain is John Lydon selling computer games and Green Day filling stadiums. But if you think punk - the spirit of punk - is dead, go to South America, go to Russia, go to Eastern Europe and see what the young punk fans there have to say about it.