Search
Street Fusion
A former Australian Hair Fashion Awards Victorian Hairdresser of the Year, Malisa Masci is the owner and creative director of Masci Hair & Spa. For her collection dubbed Street Fusion, she created a collaboration of what is current now, and what she feels will happen in the future. Although Malisa went for what’s on-trend, she feels that it is most important to be progressive with a unique and individual style.
Courageous Hues
Big, brazen, and off-the-scale boldness take fashion color to a new level. It’s bright, richly saturated, and brave beyond belief. This unflinching series by Sanja Scher of Chiseled Hair fuses textured shapes with intense hues for a uniquely confident statement.
Are Friends Electric
This futuristic collection of hairstyles by Francesco Group Church Lane in Stafford, England was inspired by the new wave electronic music of the 1979 Replicas album from Gary Numan and his band Tubeway Army. Borrowing the title of a later album Are ‘Friends’ Electric, this series of electrically charged visuals offers hair that is so very on point. Strong shapes are the foundation for unique shades of apple red, denim blue, lemon lime and snappy peach.
Icy Appeal
The Art Team at D&J Ambrose goes for an icy appeal for these winter-worthy looks for hair. A little bit retro with hints of shagginess, bitten baby bangs and wavy, tendril-like length is offset by cool-hued texture throughout. Color ranges from ice white platinum and silvery greyed blondes to muted mahogany with a warm focal point or a transition from greyed out black to barely brown darkness.
Golden Age of Berlin
For this collection, hair artist Detlef Gehlhaar was inspired by Berlin. The Weimar Republic of the 1920s brought
forth an exciting free spirit of creativity and culture. During this time, the golden age of the avant-garde
bloomed and grew leading to the Bauhaus and many other artistic and cultural innovations. This
spirit enraptured Berlin and gave the city a creative vibrancy and energy during the 20s – a time
that was lost under the cloud of history but is now being re-lived. This series reflects the
Blame It On The Boogie
With influences taken from every corner of the globe, fusing together old and new, and drawing upon the 70s & 80s women’s cuts, colors and textures are more dynamic than ever. Bill Tsiknaris wanted the vibe of these two dynamic decades to flow throughout his dynamic collection and to capture the movement and essence that overwhelmed the disco era.