How to Do Pigtail French Braids
In the context of hairstyles, the usage
of the term pigtail shows considerable variation. According to most dictionaries, a pigtail is a braid of
tightly woven hair. The name is based on the short, thin and kinked tail of a pig, referring to the way a
short, tight braid may stand out from the scalp through asymmetric tension of the weave. However, the term
may also apply to a single braid regardless of length or tension, focusing instead on the knobby texture of
the overall structure.
Alternately, the plural term pigtails may be
applied to a pair of two braids or ponytails on opposite sides of the head. The latter hairstyle is also
known as bunches, especially in British English; the "pigtail" analogy for this usage appears to be based on
the upright position of short ponytails when tightly secured against the scalp, or alternately to the vaguely
helical shape of curly hair descending from a high ponytail.
The term pigtail appears in English in
the American colonies in the 1600s to describe a twist of chewing tobacco. One of the steps in
processing the tobacco was to twist a handful of leaves together to form a compact bunch that would then be
cured (dried, either with or without smoking). The term "pigtail" was applied to the bunch based on its
resemblance to a twisted pig's tail.
From the later 1600s through the 1800s, the
term came to be applied to any braided (plaited, in British parlance) hairstyle. The British army also
adopted a single pigtail or "queue" as its standard dress for long hair.
Robert Louis Stevenson mentions "pigtail"
referring to hair and then to "pigtail tobacco" in the first and fourth chapters of Treasure Island,
respectively.
Most dictionaries still define "pigtail" as a
single tight braid. However, many American English speakers use the term to describe two symmetrical bunches
of hair on either side of the head, braided or not. In some cases, the term only applies to unbraided hair.
This usage of the term can be seen on personal and professional websites devoted to hairstyles or even by
typing "pigtails" into a search engine.
Styles
There are numerous styles of pigtails a person
may wear their hair in. They may be braided, straightened, beaded, ribboned, fishtailed, and even French
braided. Pigtails can be placed on different parts of a person's head. The higher the pigtails the more
childish look it gives. The lower pigtails give off a more conservative look.
In many regions, pigtail bunches and pigtail
braids are traditionally given to very young girls, though it is not unusual for younger and fully grown
women to wear them as well in informal situations. It is very rare for men or boys to wear pigtail
bunches.
In Britain, pigtails do not convey a childish
connotation. Even to this day British barristers wear a wig with pigtails as a sign of their
authority.
In some regions of China, traditional culture
related the wearing of pigtails to a girl's marital status. A young, unmarried, Chinese girl would often wear
two buns, or bundles of hair on either side of the head to display her availability to prospective husbands.
However, when this girl would marry, the two pigtails, or buns, would be replaced with just one, thus
indicating her marriage.
It is thought, that this may have led to the
western view of pigtails being typically associated with children and young girls;unmarried Chinese girls who
had immigrated to the western world would still wear their hairstyles as they had in China. This cultural
aspect gradually spread to westerners, although its meaning was largely lost. It is worth noting, however,
that Chinese boys and men did not change their hairstyle regardless of marital
status.
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