Hairstylist Paul Hanlon’s destroyed French twists at Proenza Schouler are likely to cause the kind of frenzy more often reserved for the design duo’s coveted PS1 bags. “It’s a bit wrong,” he said of the deconstructed updos, which, pinned loosely to one side, gave the impression of teetering on the verge of collapse as models strode down the runway. “It’s like last season’s girl tried to put her hair up, but she couldn’t really be bothered. Then she slept in it,” he said with a laugh. “She’s a bit more mature now—less schoolgirl and more woman—but she’s still cool.”
Perhaps the late arrival of more than two dozen models backstage worked in his favor. As Hanlon, whose team of Frédéric Fekkai stylists frantically pushed and prodded the hair before they were rushed into first looks, said of its unstudied appeal: “I was thinking about when I was a kid, the way the girls used to lean their heads against the window on the school bus. They’d kind of fall asleep and then, all of a sudden it would be their stop and they’d scramble to get their stuff and their hair would be kind of mashed up.” We love it.
This will make a great not too shinny everyday hairstyle, but also to make an amazing
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