@SFOMuseum Twitter Posts Tagged HairStyle
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See “Hair Style” on display, post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1 or online: https://t.co/hvo6hwZgUy
#HairStyle#hairThis tweet was posted on August 23, 2021.
This is your last week to see “Hair Style”. This exhibition features historical tools, hair products from the 1910s to the 1970s, and novelty items, from early curling irons and hair dryers to one-of-a-kind hair sculptures.
#HairStyle#hairThis tweet was posted on August 23, 2021.
See “Hair Style” on display, post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1 or online at: https://t.co/hvo6hwZgUy
#HairStyleThis tweet was posted on July 12, 2021.
In an attempt to mimic the salon experience at home, portable bonnet hair dryers, which had a shower-cap style headpiece attached to a hose and motor, debuted in the early 1950s. #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on July 12, 2021.
Impress your hairstylist with some trivia! Hooded dryers began to appear in salons in the 1930s. They were perfectly suited to the increasingly complicated hairstyles of the ensuing decades, which required weekly salon visits to have hair “set.” #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on July 12, 2021.
See “Hair Style” on display, post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1 and online at: https://t.co/hvo6hwZgUy
And check out our curator-led video tour: https://t.co/RwMriAya1C
#HairStyleThis tweet was posted on June 04, 2021.
In the 1920s, women applied a setting lotion, like Jo-cur, to create finger waves and pin curls. Hairspray surfaced in the 1940s and by the 1950s, high-volume hairstyles created a great demand for it. By the mid-1960s, it was the top selling beauty product in the U.S. #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on June 04, 2021.
Even after a year of staying home, it's hard to imagine life without shampoo, which emerged in the early 1900s. At the same time, in 1906, Black entrepreneur Madam C. J. Walker launched her ultra-successful Wonderful Hair Grower promising to grow hair long and strong. #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on June 04, 2021.
Among the sculptures that we have on view are "The Beehive," "The Flip," "The Bubble," and "The Pompadour."
See “Hair Style” on display, post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1 or online at: https://t.co/hvo6hwZgUy
#HairStyleThis tweet was posted on May 13, 2021.
The boxes and bags full of old rollers, rods, curlers, clips, combs, and barrettes that Hafler has acquired over the years inspired his one-of-a-kind “Hairsterical” sculptures each of which features a different hairstyle. #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on May 13, 2021.
Jeff Hafler, a self-professed “hairstorian” and veteran hairstylist, began collecting vintage hair-related objects while attending cosmetology school in 1991. #HairStyleThis tweet was posted on May 13, 2021.
See “Hair Style” on display, post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1 or online at: https://t.co/hvo6hwZgUy
#HairStyleThis tweet was posted on April 23, 2021.