I say "Part 1" because this is a work in progress. I would also like to say up front that I am not a hair genius, in fact I suck really really badly at hair, which is probably why I don't have any of my own to speak of - I get frustrated and cut it all off.

That being said, I want to show you my most recent Big Hair Adventure, because I'm actually proud of it.

I was looking through old vintage photos and ads recently, and kept running across the most fabulous "Hair Fantasies" of the 1960s. Ladies 50 years ago really knew how to sculpt their hair, and the height they achieved rivaled the hair hoppers of the 18th c. and then some. How did they do it? With the teasing comb and hairspray of course, but more importantly, with hair pieces. Big ones.


American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
These images are from The Hair Hall of Fame blog - https://thehairhalloffame.blogspot.com/search/label/1960s
So I undertook to make a hair piece from a package of 18" human hair wefts I bought a little while ago. The idea with the hair pieces is that it sits on top of the head, like a hat, and blends with your real hair, which takes a lot of fenagling and style trickery.

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Click for notes
My first experiment with the piece proved quite awesome...in front. What you can't see is that there's absolutely nothing going on in the back, and I learned very quickly that I need MORE hair. Another part of my problem, though, was the absence of rats.

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Experiment #1 - looks good in front, but nothin' going on in back
Rats? What's a rat. Let me disperse the visions of rodentia living in your hair...a hair rat is an understructure for hair, commonly and historically created from wads of your own hair that you have brushed out and saved and rolled into these thick tube-like shapes. For those of us who don't have any discarded hair to make rats out of, you can make them out of polyfill and old nylons, or net stockings.

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FatRat with wig clips sew on both sides, to attach it securely to the wiglet cap, which is made of net.
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A smaller, longer rat.
Don't be afraid of the rats, they are fantastic. They are like the hoop skirts of hair, and they allow you to get the height and shape without wasting valuable hair by having to backcomb it into shape. I created three rats of varying sizes - small, medium/long, and super-huge. They should really be very close in color to the hair you are working with, so in my case I will need to paint/dye/something them.

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The FatRat placed on the crown of the head. There's a lot of hair pulled forward that will be smoothed over this rat
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Look at the height you can get when the hair is pulled over the rat, and it can get higher and higher as you like
The rats in front allowed me to pull the hair up and over, for the pouf, and I then had more hair in back to work with. In this case I curled the tendrils and let them fall down the back, but the plan is to create individual clip-on additions - more barrel curls, and the characteristic rolls - that can be added wherever needed to "fill" the space back there, and get the period look.

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Late-night photos, no makeup, but look at the hair - my own hair is blended in to the front, over the poof
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
Blending is more difficult on the sides because I have so little there, but backcombing, smoothing, and spraying is the trick.
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Tendrils down the back. Adding some clip-on rolls will make a big difference, I think.
I do want to say one thing about all this wiggery - IT'S HARD. At least it's really flippin' hard for me, and if it's hard for you too, know that you are not alone. I foolishly thought this hair thing would come together easily, but it's a difficult skill that an entire industry of specialist studied and apprenticed for years to learn, just like shoemaking and staymaking. The wigmistress who worked on The DuchessAmerican Duchess Historic Shoes Blog studied wigmaking for 2 years and has worked on countless productions to get to the level of wiggery she accomplished on that film! Me? I think I'll try the book Wig Making and Styling: A Complete Guide for Theatre & FilmAmerican Duchess Historic Shoes Blog and practice, practice, practice!
American Duchess