Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Ribbons And Bows: Alberta Daddies Get Schooled On How To Style Daughters' Hair

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2016 11:39 AM
    Scott Dry faked his way through his first French braid and learned that the trick to a perfect bun is using more "whatever they're called" — bobby pins.
     
    By the end of class, his smiling six-year-old daughter was itching to race home and show Mom that Daddy did her hairdo.
     
    "I wouldn't say I'm an expert," says Dry, a 43-year-old married father of two.
     
    "I'll never be as good as Mom. I'm OK with that."
     
    Dry was one of 15 fathers who recently took part in a father-daughter hair workshop at the Luna salon in Chestermere, a bedroom community east of Calgary.
     
    It's one of several such classes that have popped up in Canada in the last few months, part of a global trend that started last year.
     
    "Dads are getting a little bit more involved with their daughters and doing their hair," says Luna manager, Reyse Van Gelder.
     
    A Facebook post about the fad caught her eye, so she put together the salon's first free class last October. Another followed in March and another is anticipated for this summer.
     
    And when some moms also in need of hairstyling skills asked to join this year, Van Gelder started a mother-daughter class too. It was held separately from the fathers' class so the men wouldn't feel overwhelmed.
     
    The dads were given lessons on everything from how to brush hair without the squealing and tears to creating fancy French and fish-tail braids.
     
    And not all of them had clumsy fingers. 
     
     
    "I also met a dad who knew how to French braid better than I could, so it was like, 'Why are you even here?'"
     
    For some of the men, Van Gelder says, it was simply a fun way to bond with their daughters.
     
    All the girls left with goody bags filled with elastics, brushes, bows and barrettes.
     
    The father-daughter hair craze — spawning classes as far away as Australia and Europe — even made waves in a heartwarming Super Bowl commercial in February. A hair care product company  showed three players in the National Football League attempting to do their young daughters' hair with their rookie fingers.
     
    "I don't know why they make these barrettes so complicated for guys," Pittsburgh Steeler Deangelo Williams says in the ad, as he struggles to wrap a pink bobbled elastic around the end of a braid.
     
    The scene is likely to be typical in many father-daughter hair classes, some of which have morphed into fundraising events with names like "Beer and Braids." The best hairstyling dad usually takes home a six-pack.
     
    In a February class at the Coiffure D salon in Trois-Rivieres, Que., one father reportedly confessed to using a vacuum cleaner at home to suck his daughter's hair into a ponytail. He promised to never do it again.
     
    "There's so much that's targeted towards moms," says Eva Shortt, an event planner who organized a "Hair 101: Dad & Daughter Hairstyling" class at Whipper Snipperz Cuts for Kids in Guelph, Ont., last winter.
     
     
    She says many of the dads in the class were big and tough guys, some with tattoos.
     
    "They were just so sweet with their daughters. It was amazing to see," Shortt says.
     
    "I definitely want to do it again."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour
    Parents who are ready to welcome a baby show a lot about their future co-parenting behaviour during pregnancy, reveals a new study...

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour

    Indian men want women to propose: Survey

    Indian men want women to propose: Survey
    Traditionally, it's the guys who pop the question to take a relationship forward but an increasing number of Indian men now prefer if women make the first move...

    Indian men want women to propose: Survey

    Even toddlers use maths while playing

    Even toddlers use maths while playing
    Researchers at the University of Washington have found that toddlers could differentiate between two ways a game is played and would opt for the one,....

    Even toddlers use maths while playing

    Watch The Video: Don't miss the world's scariest selfie!

    Watch The Video: Don't miss the world's scariest selfie!
    Billed as “World's scariest selfie” on You Tube, the video shows Daniel Lau and two friends atop a towering skyscraper eating a banana before...

    Watch The Video: Don't miss the world's scariest selfie!

    You can't steal this bicycle

    You can't steal this bicycle
    Three engineering students in Chile have developed a bicycle called Yerka which they claim is impossible to steal....

    You can't steal this bicycle

    Sibling bond is longest lasting relationship

    Sibling bond is longest lasting relationship
    "It lasts longer than our relationship with our children, certainly longer than with a spouse, and with the exception of a few lucky men and women, longer than...

    Sibling bond is longest lasting relationship