About judydeluca

Author of the enovel, Towel Dry and a Good Cry Board Certified Haircolorist

Beehive hairdo / B-52 bomber

How about this piece of trivia?  The beehive hairdo was also known as the B-52 for its resemblance in silhouette to the conical nose of the B-52 bomber airplane.

Stars like Audrey Hepburn and Sophia Loren made this style popular throughout hollywood and salon’s across the globe in the late 50’s and 60’s.

In the 50’s the bouffant emerged and morphed its way over the years into the beehive ‘do.  I don’t think this style will never die because it keeps morphing its way through time.  The group B-52’s made the hairdo popular again in the 70’s.

Marge Simpson gave it a new twist in the 80’s!And my favorite modern-day beehive so far, of all time, was Amy Winehouse.

Many musicians such as Adele and Jennifer Lopez are still sporting the ‘do…keeping it alive, and keeping it real.

 

 

 

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.

 

 

 

 

 

The Feast of The Three Saints

In Chapter Nineteen of my book, Towel Dry and a Good Cry, Josie and her family go to the Feast of Our Lady.  In the Boston area, where I’m originally from, The Feast of The Three Saints is celebrated by Italians and their community, similar to Josie’s experience, over the Labor Day Weekend. The Feast honors three martyred brothers, Saints, Alfio, Filadelfo and Cirino.

The purpose of this feast is to maintain the tradition of honoring the Holy Martyrs of the Christian Faith, to celebrate with family and the community, and to contribute to charities in the area.

Born in the third century in southeastern Italy during the Roman persecution of the Christians, the brothers Alfio, Filadelfo and Cirino were educated in the Christian faith.  As young boys, they witnessed the persecution and martyrdom of their mother.  The Roman Court knew that the Three Brothers were Christians from a noble family and tried to make them turn away from Christianity and worship pagan gods.

The brothers refused and were sent to Tertullo, the merciless governor of Sicily, in Lentini.  Tertullo was ordered to force their Christian faith away from them using any means, including torture.  They were beaten and tortured cruelly while in Lentini, and several times St. Andrew the Apostle appeared to them and healed their wounds.  Tertullo tried in vain to make Alfio and his brothers change their beliefs, but they remained steadfast in their faith.

After several months of beating and torturing, Tertullo became furious and ordered his soldiers to produce the final instruments of death for the Brothers: a pair of tongs to tear out the tongue of Alfio, a gridiron set over a fire for Filadelfo and a cauldron filled with oil and pitch for Cirino.  On May 10th in the year 243 A.D. the Three Brothers were martyred in Lentini. The Romans tied 22-year-old Alfio to a post and tore out his tongue.  Filadelfo, 21 years old, was burned upon a gridiron and Cirino, only 19, was thrown into a cauldron of boiling oil.

The story didn’t end there.  During their lifetime and even after their death, numerous miracles have occurred which are attributed to the intercession of the Three Saints, even today.

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for beauty info and tips.

 

 

 

“Grooming The Shrubbery”

Standing behind my chair day in and day out, a lot of topics get discussed. This particular question comes up a lot from young and old clients.  Who better to ask than your hairstylist when it comes to questions about “grooming the shrubbery”? These are the three most asked questions I get, 1) what is the best way to cut the hair, 2) does it turn gray and 3) can I color it and what do I use?

It’s all a matter of preference but this is usually the answers I give.  Besides shaving, using a clipper with an attachment is the easiest and most accurate way of “pruning”.  Yes, unfortunately, it turns gray.  There is a special hairdye called Betty Beauty Down There Hair Color that you can buy online for $14.99.

Choose from eight colors…..how fun!  Brown Betty, Fun Hot Pink Betty, Sexy Lilac Betty, Blonde Betty, Auburn Betty, Love Red Betty, Lucky Green Betty and Malibu Blue Betty

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

 

 

 

 

Clairol…the beginning

A chemist, Lawrence M. Gelb, set off from New York to Europe with his family in 1931 in search of a new product to launch and market in the United States. The country was in the midst of the worst depression in history but Gelb was an energetic businessman and was determined to beat the depression.

During his trip, Gelb examined dozens of cosmetic and fragrance products, but his interest was not piqued until he came across  a European haircolor preparation named Clairol. Unlike other haircoloring products which coated the hair, Clairol actually penetrated the hair shaft, producing softer, more natural looking tones. Gelb’s wife, a woman with a strong fashion sense, saw the potential for this new haircoloring product in America. The Gelb’s brought Clairol back to the States and demonstrated it to a spellbound beauty salon audience.  Hairdresser’s were delighted, Clairol was endorsed, the Gleb’s were in business, and hairdresser’s enthusiastically added haircolor to their menu of services.

The new haircolor that would change the look of America was called, Instant Clairol Oil Shampoo Tint. Not only did Clairol’s sales soar, but salon haircolor service sales began to soar, as well.

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In 1950 after seven years of research and development Clairol introduced Miss Clairol Hair Color Bath. It lightened, tinted, conditioned and shampooed the hair in one step and took only twenty minutes to complete.  Within six months of Miss Clairol’s introduction, the number of women going to the salon for haircolor increased by more than five hundred percent.

Clairol’s professional products and education are still a major part of the salon industry today after seventy one years.

Follow me on Pinterest for mor beauty info and tips

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

 

 

 

Pool Hustling

Josie Capelli and her four brothers loved to play pool and did their share of hustling, as depicted in my novel, Towel Dry and a Good Cry.

The most notorious figure in the history of pool is, Rudolph Wanderone, aka, Minnesota Fats.

Name and Legend::

Rudolph Luther “Minnesota Fats” Wanderone, Jr., a.k.a. “New York Fats”; “Fatty”, “The Bank Shot Bandit”, “The Fat One”, “Triple Smart”, “Dean of the Green”, “Double Smart Fats”, a.k.a. (??). A hustler of many names, Fats was an excellent pool player, though his skills did not qualify him as among the very best. His claim to fame was as a huckster and showman, earning him appearances on international television and in the Billiards Congress of America’s Pool Hall of Fame for “Meritorious Service”.

A Life of Legal Larceny:

In the late 1950’s, Fats settled down in Dowell, Illinois, near the site of the infamous Johnston City hustlers’ tournaments of the ’60s. Propelled by publicity he generated following the success of the movie, The Hustler, Fats hosted a television show, “Minnesota Fats Hustles the Stars” where he challenged Hollywood figures such as Zsa Zsa Gabor to games of pool (and talked incessantly to distract them if they started to defeat him!).

Fats quit playing in tournaments around that time and hustled pool plus made personal appearances at pool related events. He was inducted into Pool’s Hall of Fame in 1984.

Here is a clip of Jackie Gleason in  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TC3kqFUmqQ the movie, The Hustler.

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for beauty info and tips.

 

 

 

Ombre

Haircolorist’s have much more freedom to be creative, these days than ever before, because of the evolution of hair color. It’s all thanks to a French chemist, Eugene Schueller, for developing the first synthetic hair dye in 1907.

In 2012 a gorgeous new way of coloring the hair emerged, called Ombre, French for shading.  As a colorist myself, I adore this look. This technique of haircoloring is deepest at the roots and softly graduates lighter and lighter trailing down the hair shaft until the ends are the lightest shade.

This way of coloring can be done with subtly or with boldness.

 

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.

 

 

 

Product History

Jheri Redding, a hairdresser and chemist invented modern day ph balanced conditioner. He founded three major national haircare companies, Redken, Jhirmack and Nexxus.

He was best known for inventing the Jheri Curl which was popular in the early eighties.  Michael Jackson sported this look very well.Drug store shampoo’s and conditoners were popular, as well, around that time and were endorced by celebrities. Here are a few I remember using, Wella Balsam, Agree, Herbal Essence, Gee Your Hair Smells Terrific and my personal favorite, Short and Sassy, to name a few.

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Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

 

 

 

The marcel curling iron

Josie Capelli, the main character of my book, landed herself a job at a swanky hair salon.  She was told by Deolena, her new boss, that she was required to use a marcel curling iron. Josie hadn’t quite mastered the hang of that thing yet and she had to master it in a hurry.

In the early eighties everyone was using a curling iron and women that were used to going to the salon for a weekly roller set were starting to branch out and get a weekly curling iron set. (The beginning of the end of roller sets for anyone who wasn’t ancient)

The marcel curling iron had no temperature dial.  It was unbelievably hot and used with the right setting spray, resulted in a pretty firm curl with no roller marks to tease out.

If you touched any skin with this iron, such as an ear, either your own or a client that’s talking a mile a minute bobbing her head around, even for a micro-second, a blister would appear immediately!

This is a picture of my 80’s marcel iron I had back in the day. (We also used it in the video book trailer)  This particular iron, a Helene Curtis, was considered a state of the art tool at that time.

 

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.

 

 

 

Something important

Here is something I think is important.  I’ve actually found a melanoma on a clients scalp.  She was eternally grateful I did.

We here at Shots have  long considered our trips to the hair salon to be good for our mental health: A  pampering head massage in the shampoo chair can be amazingly  relaxing.

Public officials think hair stylists could play a vital role in physical health, too, by helping spot potentially cancerous skin lesions on their clients’ scalp, neck and face. Research published Monday in the Archives of Dermatology suggests some stylists and barbers are already informally performing these skin cancer exams on clients.

In a survey of 203 Houston-area hair salon workers, 58 percent of respondents told researchers from Harvard’s School of Public Health that they had urged a client at least once to get a mole checked out by a medical professional.

“Almost every dermatologist I’ve talked to anecdotally has said to me, Yes, I’ve had a melanoma case referred to me by a hair professional,” Alan Geller, a senior lecturer at Harvard and study co-author, tells Shots.

Hairdressers and barbers tend to enjoy an easy rapport with clients, see them regularly and often share advice with them. All of which explains why, over the years, public health officials have recruited salon workers’ help in various health awareness campaigns — such as encouraging women to seek mammograms and men to get prostate screenings. Many of these efforts have focused on reaching minority communities.

Getting hair salons to help in the fight against head and neck cancers made a lot of sense to Geller and his colleagues:  Stylists and barbers spend much of their time staring at their clients’ scalps and necks. Over a lifetime, these areas receive a ton of exposure to the sun’s UV rays.

More than 80 percent of the most common types of skin cancers — squamous cell carcinomas and basal cell carcinomas — occur on the scalp, neck and face. And melanomas, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, tend to be “disproportionately fatal” on the scalp, Geller says, perhaps because an exhaustive exam of the head and hair isn’t a standard part of most visits to the doctor.

“We asked ourselves, who might be most predisposed to looking at the neck and face?” Gellar says. He and his colleagues wanted to know if hair professionals would be willing to receive more formal training in spotting different types of skin cancers; 49 percent of survey respondents said yes.

Even  without training, many of the hair care workers were already performing their own exams. The survey found 37 percent said they had checked out  more than half of their clients’ scalps in the month prior to the survey, which  was conducted in January 2010. About a third said they’d looked at more than  half of clients’ necks.

Geller and his colleagues are now working with the Melanoma Foundation of New England to develop a statewide program to train hair professionals in Massachusetts on how to recognize potential signs of skin cancer. It should be up and running later this year.

Geller acknowledges it’s possible some hair stylists may cause needless worry in clients by pointing out moles and lesions that turn out to be harmless. “I think the best way that we’re trying to reassure customers,” he says, “is to have hair professionals say, ‘I’m not an expert. But maybe the most important thing you can do is to see your doctor as soon as possible.’ ”

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.