Keeping Up Appearances: Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow…the history of plucking, waxing, tweezing, and shaving

Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow…the history of plucking, waxing, tweezing, and shaving

Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow...the history of plucking, waxing, tweezing, and shaving

Tuesday, March 22 at 6:30 pm, Zoom

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Keeping Up Appearances: A history of women’s beauty trends and the standards that shaped them

Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow is the second in a 3-part herstory unsanitized series presented by Ehris Urban & Velya Jancz-Urban of the Grounded Goodwife.

The human body contains 5,000,000 hair follicles. The practice of removing female body hair isn’t new – it can be traced back to ancient Rome and Egypt. During World War II, wartime shortage of nylon meant women couldn’t wear stockings every day. Having to go bare legged, more women shaved their legs, a practice that prepared them for the mini-skirt in the 1960s. By 1964, 98% of American women were routinely shaving their legs. Today, the choice to groom body hair is a personal preference, but it’s a practice that’s been shaped by centuries of history.