To hear Pam Connolly talk about getting her hair colored, it’s no wonder she has decided to slowly go gray.
“As you start to go gray there’s a lot of pressure not to be gray,” she said. “You feel you look older than you need to, and so what happens is you have to go to the salon every four or five weeks and you’re in a chair and they put stuff in your hair that’s strange looking and not attractive, and then they leave you to let it set.”
All of that sounds bad enough—but while you’re waiting for the color to take hold, you can’t help but look at yourself, reflected in the large mirror placed in front of you.
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“People say they can’t stand looking at themselves. It’s very vulnerable, and I was struck by that. I’m sitting here trying to grin and bear it, and I said, ‘OK, just look—really look—at the wrinkles.’ And when I looked, it wasn’t really that bad and I thought, ‘Why are we so afraid to look at ourselves? Why are we afraid to look the age we are?’ ”
Anita.
Pam Connolly
Darlene.
Pam Connolly
Alexis.
Pam Connolly
It’s a question Connolly started to try to answer through her photography as she began working on the series “Salon Studies” in 2013 while pursuing an MFA in photography at Hartford Art School.* With the help of her stylist who asked her own clients if they would be willing to be photographed in the chair, Connolly began shooting women through the mirror while they’re in the salon chairs during their moments of self-reflection.
Apart from the moment of introspection she had while sitting in the chair, Connolly was also inspired by Greek and Roman sculpture she feels the women represent while they are in the salon.
“I thought of these women as beautiful and heroic and brave to allow me, to allow the camera, to look at them and to record this moment,” she said. “It became this very powerful thing.”
So far Connolly has photographed 20 women in the chairs, including women who made the choice not to cover the gray and said working on the project was fascinating because a lot of women told her their stories while they were sitting in the salon.
“There were a lot of stories, like I feel my kids don’t like it if I look older, or my husband doesn’t like it, so it became very interesting, so many stories and so much baggage around this decision,” she said.
Fanda Smoking.
Pam Connolly
Dale.
Pam Connolly
Connolly said she would like to include more women of different races and socio-economic backgrounds. She took one portrait of a woman smoking outside of the salon, Fanda Smoking, and would like to take more outside of the salon and even in the homes of women who color their own hair. She would also like to find a writer or anthropologist to work on a book with her about the phenomenon that discusses the reasons behind the need not to look one’s age.
“For a woman when you have white hair, somehow you’re discounted out of being attractive or sexy or desirable where for a man it’s not like that, and I don’t know why that is,” she said. “Could it be that it signals that I can’t have a baby anymore or I’m not fertile? I don’t know.”
Connolly said she feels as if she’s part of this experiment as well and is taking baby steps toward allowing her natural color to show.
“My mother said, ‘don’t do it!’ ” she said. “Some days I’m digging it and other days I’m looking at myself and I think, yeah, you do look old. My stylist is putting in some lowlights so I’m doing it slowly. I felt I had to. I felt why am I so afraid? What is so scary about looking 55 when you’re 55?”
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
I remember when Mom colored her hair & it looked so fake. That's what I don't like.
I do use a moisturizer and it has a little sunscreen in it.
With me, what you see is what you get.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
I get mine colored. I do it for me. I like my hair its natural color and I don't like the way gray looks. The gray hairs are a different texture and coloring them helps calm them down. My grandmother is 88 and she colors her hair a soft brown. For some reason is doesn't look ridiculous - it looks almost normal. I see myself being her age and still coloring my hair. Because I like it.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
You can't win either way. If you dress younger, then you are trying to act young or something. If you dress older, then you have given up or look like a frump. So, if you look your age and act your age, you get criticized, if you don't look your age and don't act your age, then you get criticized. So, just do whatever the hell you please!
You can't win either way. If you dress younger, then you are trying to act young or something. If you dress older, then you have given up or look like a frump. So, if you look your age and act your age, you get criticized, if you don't look your age and don't act your age, then you get criticized. So, just do whatever the hell you please!
I agree. The only person I have to please is the person I see in the mirror.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
Well, what does it mean to look your age? When you are 50 are you just supposed to automatically wear polyester or what?
See, when I think "look your age", I think more about appropriate dress.
Seeing a 60 yr old in micro minis and skin tight tee shirts looks strange most of the time.
One of the ladies at church is a cute, petite 28 year old. She can shop in the girls department. But she gets a bit miffed when someone tells her she is cute. Well, maybe the little kitty cats all over you dress makes you look 12?
If a person wants to color their hair, then go for it.
I don't think there is anything wrong with it.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Eh, I'm 30 and have quite a few grays. They've been multiplying the last few years. I only care a little bit. I put highlights in, and that takes care of most of them. People point them out to me, either scandalized, like 'OMG, pull out that hair, it is gray!!' or like they are telling me terrible news, lowering their voice, and offering to take care of it. In the same way you would tell someone they had a pair of underwear stuck to their pants or something.
My grandmother will say something to me now and then.
I've gone from a few grey hairs to salt and pepper to mostly silver.
The only thing I don't care for is the dullness that seems to be taking over.
But that has more to do with my meds really.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
If it's about "looking your age" then that would be why I color my hair. I've had grey hairs since I was a teen, and colored them for a few years now. But that's not why I do it. I do it because I like my brown hair. And I have very few grey hairs, but *I* notice them. I don't sit in the salon ashamed, I feel good for taking care of myself.
If it's about "looking your age" then that would be why I color my hair. I've had grey hairs since I was a teen, and colored them for a few years now. But that's not why I do it. I do it because I like my brown hair. And I have very few grey hairs, but *I* notice them. I don't sit in the salon ashamed, I feel good for taking care of myself.
Exactly!
I have the best hairdresser, she really wants me to feel good about myself.
I guess I have never felt ashamed of my gray and I've been gray since my late 20's.
I did color during my late 30's to late 40's, then I was done. For me, it just seemed pointless.
I am not ashamed of my gray hairs either. I just don't like the way they look. I like being one of only a few brown haired people in most places in this state. Lots of blondes here and I like letting my Italian wavy hair stand out. It doesn't have anything to do with feeling ashamed - quite the opposite actually. And I could give a flying fart what society thinks. Gray hair is actually very on trend right now. Lots of young people are dying their hair gray. Doesn't mean I want it.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
To clarify, I'm not ashamed of my grey hairs, I meant I'm not ashamed of coloring my hair or the process. The feel I got from this article is that the author almost wanted to hide the process of coloring her hair and didn't like how it is done or looks while it it happening. Sure, I look funny and it smells weird. But I'm not ashamed of the process and don't feel like I need to hide
I started going grey in my twenties - family genes - and colored my hair for years. About 10 years ago I just got fed up and let it go grey. It's completely silver now and I get compliments all the time about my beautiful hair. I'll never go back to coloring.
I don't even know if I have gray hair. I started coloring it at 17 and have been coloring it since. I've never given myself a chance to have gray hair. I really like the color of my hair and I do it completely to make me happy.
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“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
I started coloring my hair when I was 30. I noticed a couple grays, and decided I wanted to be a redhead. I strayed back to dark brown at one point, but it happened because I got a hairdresser who didn't understand me when I said darker red, like auburn. Anyway, I wear very little foundation because I think at my age it looks too cakey. I wear makeup and try to wear a fashionable hairstyle, not to look young, but to look current.
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
I am not grey. 100% white! It is scary. I go to the salon. No one even knows I dye it.
G is 100% white. He has the absolute most beautiful hair on a man I've ever seen. We can't go anywhere without someone stopping him and saying something about it.
I want to go grey so bad. I have natural grey-lights (my roots aren't grey, but I have long grey streaks). I'm not going to color it. I think I will look awesome grey...
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America guarantees equal opportunity, not equal outcome...
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
I am not grey. 100% white! It is scary. I go to the salon. No one even knows I dye it.
It is your Irish heritage. My ex has completely white hair & it looked great with his blue eyes.
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
I am not grey. 100% white! It is scary. I go to the salon. No one even knows I dye it.
It is your Irish heritage. My ex has completely white hair & it looked great with his blue eyes.
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Of course if I were a lot younger and still had my long hair, I'd totally do this.
My hair is naturally curly and I would have loved it.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
My dad was grey in his 20's. My sis too though she still colors her hair. If I stopped coloring it I would be completely grey. I have pondered that,lol.
I am not grey. 100% white! It is scary. I go to the salon. No one even knows I dye it.
It is your Irish heritage. My ex has completely white hair & it looked great with his blue eyes.
I can tell by my roots that I am very grey. I can also tell by the texture if I let it go curly that it's grey, so I can't do curls anymore without it looking like frizz. The flat iron is my best friend.
I think some women look beautiful grey. I think most men look great with grey hair.