Makeover: My Hair Looks Bad Long but Worse Short

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Mary is soft and romantic, but with a small head in relation to her body, she needs more volume and fullness. With very fine, flat hair, it is nearly impossible to create a soft, feminine look with a short hairstyle. A classic bob would draw her down and would need to be teased to have the right balance, but then would be too fixed and wouldn’t last very long. If we went short, she would need to tease everything to cover her splits and cowlicks, and that, too, would fall flat quickly. Not to mention, it would take a lot of time with too mature results. And again, it would not fit her romantic and feminine personal style. She liked her silver hair and was tired of coloring it. So how do you do a makeover? Since she likes her hair up and always wears her hair up, why not have THAT be her look?

Meet Christopher Hopkins – The Makeover Guy. “The makeover: It absolutely inspires me. Improvement and response. Thrilling. At three years old I was obsessed with the hair of my “Tootie” doll. This miniature doll, packaged in a plastic cameo, had a tiny body and very long hair. It was perfect for little hands to hold and style. I spent hours on that thing, bobby pins everywhere. Later I graduated to my sister’s Barbie dolls. You could do more with clothing for them because they had full figures for which you could create tissue paper and Scotch tape fashions, complete with stickpin earrings.”

Today Christopher is owner of reVamp! salonspa, in Minneapolis. He done makeovers on the “Oprah Winfrey Show” among other media outlets. His first book, “Staging Your Comeback, A Complete Beauty Revival for Women Over 45,” has helped improve the looks and the lives of thousands of women.

Visit his web site: www.themakeoverguy.com/

Christopher Hopkins

Meet Christopher Hopkins – The Makeover Guy. “The makeover: It absolutely inspires me. Improvement and response. Thrilling. At three years old I was obsessed with the hair of my “Tootie” doll. This miniature doll, packaged in a plastic cameo, had a tiny body and very long hair. It was perfect for little hands to hold and style. I spent hours on that thing, bobby pins everywhere. Later I graduated to my sister’s Barbie dolls. You could do more with clothing for them because they had full figures for which you could create tissue paper and Scotch tape fashions, complete with stickpin earrings.” Today Christopher is owner of reVamp! salonspa, in Minneapolis. He done makeovers on the “Oprah Winfrey Show” among other media outlets. His first book, “Staging Your Comeback, A Complete Beauty Revival for Women Over 45,” has helped improve the looks and the lives of thousands of women. Visit his web site: www.themakeoverguy.com/

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