BEAUTY FIRST, THEN CLASSES SCHOOL PREP NOW INCLUDES WAX, WEAVE.Byline: Naush Boghossian Staff Writer SANTA CLARITA Santa Clarita, city (1990 pop. 110,642), Los Angeles co., S Calif., suburb 30 mi (48 km) NW of downtown Los Angeles, on the Santa Clara River; inc. 1987. Situated in the Santa Clara valley and nearby canyons, Santa Clarita includes the former towns of Canyon Country, - When 16-year-old Erin Martin smiled, her braces See curly brace. flashed just like the small shiny pieces of foil folded into her hair. Martin, her tennis shoe-clad feet swinging from the salon chair under the dryer, waited for the blond streaks to lighten up Lighten up Selling some part of a stock or bond position in a portfolio to realize capital gains or to losses or increase cash assets. lighten up her naturally red hair. Teen visits to the hair salon A hair salon (also called 'Hairdresser' and 'Hair Parlour')is a place where one goes to get their hair cut, as well as styled, highlighted or coloured. There are many different types of hair salons that one can choose to go to. for highlights herald a new era of back-to-school rituals for teen and pre-teen girls that includes manicures and pedicures and getting their eyebrows waxed and shaped. Beauty routines that 20, or even 10 years ago, would have raised eyebrows have become as commonplace today as the trip to the drug store to buy notebooks, pencils and erasers in preparation for the new school year. ``It's pretty much normal now,'' the Valencia High junior said. ``Every girl I know has had her hair dyed at least once, and I know girls that have dyed their hair since elementary school elementary school: see school. because they didn't like their hair color.'' Martin has been highlighting her hair for three years, and she said her parents never really had a problem with it - even forking over the money for each visit. She had no idea how much it cost to give her hair that lighter touch, guessing that it was somewhere between $40 and $60. ``They were OK with it just as long as it didn't make my hair look unnatural,'' Martin said. ``Most people don't even know I've highlighted my hair.'' Highlighting or weaving weaving, the art of forming a fabric by interlacing at right angles two or more sets of yarn or other material. It is one of the most ancient fundamental arts, as indicated by archaeological evidence. has become extremely popular with young girls and it's not a trend that is likely going to pass, said a local hair salon owner. ``Girls are just starting at a younger age,'' said Laura Jicha, the owner of Kids Kutz & Wavez in Newhall, who has seen up close how times have changed in the 16 years she's owned salons. Both Jicha and Martin say television, movies, magazines and music have played the biggest roles in influencing the kind of physical appearance girls try to achieve, but Martin says other influences - like an older sister - expose them to these indulgences at an early age. At her salon, hairdressers highlight the tresses of girls much younger than Martin - even 9- and 10-year-olds. Jicha even highlighted a 4-year-old whose talent agent felt her hair needed to be blonder for a television commercial. Emily Ranboldt, 11, Allison Ranboldt, 13, Sarah Mitchell, 13, and Margaret MacQueen, 13, all showed off their fresh highlights and their sculpted sculpt v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts v.tr. 1. To sculpture (an object). 2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision: eyebrows for the start of junior high. ``People with light hair get blond highlights and people with dark hair get red highlights,'' the 11-year-old Ranboldt expounded. ``Some do their whole head and some do half.'' Jicha advises the parents of her younger clients to only do a partial weave - putting streaks in a smaller portion of the hair - because it is easier to maintain when dark roots aren't an obvious issue. It's also less expensive because touch-ups are needed every six to eight months instead of every two to three months for a full weave. ``Nobody wants their kids having dark regrowth Re`growth´ n. 1. The act of regrowing; a second or new growth. The regrowth of limbs which had been cut off. - A. B. Buckley. ,'' she said. ``The more discreet, the better.'' She explained that a lot of the younger girls' parents use the promise of highlighting as a reward for everything from doing well in school to behaving in class. The back-to-school preparations don't stop at the highlights, though. Martin showed off her newly done, French-manicured acrylic acrylic, artificial fiber made from a special group of vinyl compounds, primarily acrylonitrile. Acrylic fibers are thermoplastic (i.e., soften when heated, reharden upon cooling), have low moisture regain, are low in density, and can be made into bulky fabrics. nails - nails she first put on in the eighth grade. Local nail salons A nail salon is a beauty services establishment that offers nail care services such as manicures, pedicures, and nail enhancements primarily. Often, nail salons also offer skin care services. There are approximately 38,000 nail salons in the U.S. count teens and pre-teens among their regular customers now. ``A manicure/pedicure used to be a luxury or a reward, and now they wear it all the time,'' Jicha said. Her own 9-year-old is already asking her for acrylics. ``Before, they'd put it on just for the prom.'' Steve Nguyen, the manager of Wonder Nails in Stevenson Ranch Stevenson Ranch, California (in the 91381 ZIP Code) is a Los Angeles County, USA, unincorporated community west of Santa Clarita a few miles south of Six Flags Magic Mountain amusement park. The Stevenson Ranch fountain was redone in 2007. , said his salon has done acrylics on 12- and 13-year-old girls. At the Fair Lady salon in Stevenson Ranch, owner Jane Yoon said teenage girls come in all the time for a full set of acrylics, and for the $27 manicure/pedicure - usually paid for by their parents. ``Kids like acrylics because the polish chips quickly on real nails,'' Yoon said, pointing to a chip on one of her own real nails. The freckle-faced Martin had one more appointment before school started Monday - she was going to get her eyebrows waxed and shaped. Jicha, who shapes the eyebrows of her 9- and 11-year-old girls, said she doesn't mind allowing them a few highlights, too, choosing instead to save her energy for the issues she feels are more important. ``I don't want them to have cell phones and pagers, so we have to make choices and pick the lesser of two evils,'' she said. ``And all your friends are doing it. As parents, unfortunately we are influenced by other parents.'' CAPTION(S): 2 photos Photo: (1 -- 2 -- color) Erin Martin, 16, a Valencia High School Valencia High School may refer to:
David Crane/Staff Photographer |
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