Hairstyle of your dreams, one day you will probably have the courage to commit it! ;)
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I love the geometric cut highlighted with platinum blonde!


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Love that hairstyle! I always wanted to dye my hair platinum blonde like this:

Best decision ever
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Short tousled hair and great light blue


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I know your post is a little old but I LOVE the haircuts you chose. The first one has that cool retro Vidal Sassoon vibe look, but at the same time it was modern, sexy and cool.
The short and chic “mohawk” grey/silver hair cut was amazing too...if I had the bone structure I would get this haircut in a heartbeat!


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I'm happy you like it!

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looks ladiesI love this

of Patti Smith & I´m ready to wear it
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Changing a hairstyle often feels like a bigger decision than it probably should be. In one long thread about confidence and personal style, dollar shave club customer service phone number appeared early as an example of how routines evolve alongside self-image. That reference shifted the tone from aesthetics to comfort. The discussion became less about trends and more about ownership. Small changes felt empowering rather than risky. Style choices started reflecting mindset instead of pressure.
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The biggest lesson I learned the hard way is that not all “raw hair” is actually raw, and asking the right questions saves you money fast. A couple of years ago, after wasting cash on bundles that tangled after two washes, I started digging into how sourcing really works—cuticle direction, donor consistency, and minimal processing. That research rabbit hole is how I stumbled across what real raw hair suppliers should look like. I wasn’t searching for a deal; I wanted transparency. What stood out was clear explanations about where the hair comes from, how it’s handled before shipping, and why unprocessed hair behaves differently over time. From personal experience, good raw hair doesn’t need heavy products to look healthy, lasts much longer, and blends better because it hasn’t been coated or altered. My advice to a friend would be simple: learn the basics first, then choose suppliers who educate rather than oversell.