Our Slip On Headwraps are perfect for anyone who can't tie a headwrap. It is easy to put on. Simply slip it on and tie the ends.
They come is two sizes; regular and extra large.
*The regular size is best for anyone with natural or relaxed hair.
*The extra large size is best for anyone with a lot of locs and a lot of hair.
Satin lined for your hair protection!
https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/collections/slip-on-headwraps
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You may use waist beads to chart your weight instead of getting on a scale every day to know whether there's a gain or a loss. You can quickly know when you add on weight because it does not stretch, and it would fit closer around your hips. When you lose weight, on the other hand, the beads surrounding it would feel loose. It also helps to be mindful of the stance in the stomach and seated. To adjust your sitting posture and workout the muscles in your stomach, it will act as a reminder.
When embellishing the waist, this waist beads enhances the sensuality of a woman and makes her more desirable to the opposite sex. The beads make the body an enticing ornament, and men enjoy strumming with the beadings to express their love for their woman and their lust. In improving a man's sexual appetite, the waist beads play an important part, and they will find a woman with her waist laced with beaded strings immensely sexy and desirable.
African women boast about their roots and tradition and are not ashamed to wear waist beads to show their appreciation for their faith and their homage to it. The waist beads lend the woman's body a glamorous brush, and they also tell their daughters the meaning of wearing waist beads. Today, Black and Brown women's use of waist beads in the West has developed into its own cultural tradition, one that represents the history of the diaspora.
One of the drawbacks of African waist beads is that they are intended to show maturity. For starters, mothers tie beads around their daughter's waist in some African tradition to demonstrate their transformation into womanhood upon their first menstruation. Some Ghanaians still during naming ceremonies, wear baby beads around their waist. And as the children outgrow it it reveals that they have passed onto another period of their lives.
https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/collections/waist-beads?page=1
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You have asked, and we listened!
You can now book appointments with our team and we will be available to answer your questions!! Click the link below.
https://calendly.com/glamorouschicksheadwraps/30min?month=2020-10
You could also choose to pick up your products from our various locations.
1. 33 Wood Ave South, Suite 600, Iselin, NJ 08830
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Our Slip On Headwraps are perfect for anyone who can't tie a headwrap. It is easy to put on. Simply slip it on and tie the ends. Satin lined for your hair protection!
Shop our Slip On Headwrap Collection
https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/collections/slip-on-headwraps
Our pre tied slip on headwrap headbands are satin lined Headwraps and are soft stretch. No need for tying! Slip it on around your hair and you're all set!!
Shop the collection
https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/collections/slip-on-headwraps
Our traditional headwraps are 100% imported premium African cotton fabric. They are large enough for any style; front-knotted style, the bow style and more!
Shop the collection
https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/collections/headwraps
Visit our website https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/ to see our various headwrap collections!
Visit our YouTube for videos on various headwrap styles https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwnrofHtXBWUDVrGMW2Mm4Q
]]>A headwrap, also called head tie or headscarf, is a turban cloth worn on the head as an ornament, a fashion hair accessory, or a protective fabric for the hair and the scalp.
As a form of apparel in Zimbabwe, the headwrap has been exclusive to women of African descent. The headwrap originated in sub-Saharan Africa, and serves similar functions for both African and African-American women.
In style, the African-American woman’s head-wrap exhibits the features of sub-Saharan aesthetics and worldview. In the United States, however, the head-wrap acquired a paradox of meaning not customary on the ancestral continent.
During slavery, the headwraps were worn as a badge of enslavement. It later evolved and reemerged as a symbol of pride and Afrocentric celebration when African American men and women began fighting for freedom and equality.
To protect your hair
To avoid combing your hair
To celebrate African Heritage
To add some spark to an outfit
To express your style
Many people find it difficult when it comes to styling their headwraps. Here's how to tie the most popular headwrap style.
Front-knotted headwrap style
Here's a video tutorial on how to style your headwraps
Visit our website https://glamorouschicksheadwraps.com/ to see our various headwrap collections!
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