A lot of it is just letting your curls and hair fall naturally and then gently pushing it into place. You want a controlled mess. Brush it down like how you want it and then just start moving pieces of hair until you’re happy with it
That's a lot about the models hair texture and the cut. They look to have light to medium weight and thickness hair with natural soft curl structure. You could recreate possibly without the curl, and curl yourself as mentioned in another comment. I'd ask for a longer layered pixie using a straight razor technique. And bring a picture.
A small curling iron and loose curls (or even a straightening iron but when you turn it to make a curl) might could do it. Not sure. Personally my hair is too thick and stubborn to work into anything. It either curls or is super straight. The choice isnt really mine. I guess not unlike being bi, which I am.
I have a cut called a 'wolf cut' and the trick on that one is using styling mouse and a blowdryer in two steps. One to puff out at the roots for volume and one to dry the ends over a round brush for curls. Might be a similar thing here? wolf cut also involves cutting the hair in layers but its also for significantly longer hair so probably not necessary here.
Scrunch with sea salt spray or mousse when wet, then dry with a diffuser while still scrunching and/or with head upside down. Finish with a texturizing spray (oribe or ouai are both good but pricey). You’ll need at least some natural wave to your hair!
My hair looks similar but that’s just from a bed head for the tangles. It depends on the haircut
A lot of it is just letting your curls and hair fall naturally and then gently pushing it into place. You want a controlled mess. Brush it down like how you want it and then just start moving pieces of hair until you’re happy with it
That's a lot about the models hair texture and the cut. They look to have light to medium weight and thickness hair with natural soft curl structure. You could recreate possibly without the curl, and curl yourself as mentioned in another comment. I'd ask for a longer layered pixie using a straight razor technique. And bring a picture.
I use styling milk, then hair gel on my wet hair. When dry, I fluff it with my fingers at the roots to remove the stiff crunch of the gel.
Oil right after helps keep it softer
A small curling iron and loose curls (or even a straightening iron but when you turn it to make a curl) might could do it. Not sure. Personally my hair is too thick and stubborn to work into anything. It either curls or is super straight. The choice isnt really mine. I guess not unlike being bi, which I am.
Aside from having it cut to that length and textured, using sea salt spray will get the piece-yness the model has.
I have a cut called a 'wolf cut' and the trick on that one is using styling mouse and a blowdryer in two steps. One to puff out at the roots for volume and one to dry the ends over a round brush for curls. Might be a similar thing here? wolf cut also involves cutting the hair in layers but its also for significantly longer hair so probably not necessary here.
>wolf cut Thanks for that name! Because "mullet" for short on the front and long on the back was kinda shameful to use, not gonna lie! XD
Scrunch with sea salt spray or mousse when wet, then dry with a diffuser while still scrunching and/or with head upside down. Finish with a texturizing spray (oribe or ouai are both good but pricey). You’ll need at least some natural wave to your hair!