Elise sent me Morgan Donner's video on recreating prehistoric hairstyles from the iron age (c.200-800BCE) graves in Hallstatt, Austria, and suddenly I'm brushing off my German vocabulary to read the source papers describing archeological experiments in hairdressing.
Pins and spiral made of brass and bronze wire. |
Hallstatt Museum gallerie has images of the original pins. While there are now a few artists selling reproduction pins on Etsy, the handmade bronze hairpins are a bit outside my budget. So instead, I used Morgan's tutorial to make my own pins and spiral out of brass and bronze jewelry wire. For the spiral, I started with the 1-2cm diameter cone of 22 wire wraps, as described in the video.
"Wreath" at the back of the head. The simple bun looks the same, just more compact. |
I rather like the hanging braids. |
Low side buns. |
I skipped the top-of-head "wreath" variant for now, but will need to try it at some point. The simple bun was just like the coils I wear every day. The braids hanging by the side of the face (and meeting over the head) were fun, and I want to find excuses to wear them. The pins weren't any different to use that the straight-sided U-shaped pins I usually use for historic hairdressing. Like those, these bronze pins need a little more 'weaving' to place than a modern wavy hairpin (though the technique helps with modern pins, too). I didn't have any trouble with pins sliding out or hair getting caught in the loops, which were may main concerns.
For the low side buns, I simply tucked the ends of the braids, without fastening them off. The single-braid wreath and bun were finished off with the spiral, as were the joined hanging braids. I found that the ends of my hair were a little too thick and even for this size spiral, but still worked on the individual braids. The joined braids were even less tapered toward the ends, and this cone just didn't fit over them.
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