Hamilton 'hair party with education' aims to cut and style the locks of over 300 young people
The non-profit Excel in Style is holding its second annual event this Saturday, offering free hairstyles and cuts for Black individuals and others with textured hair who are 4 to 21 years old. Participants can sign up in advance for a spot between 9:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. ET at Hamilton's Bernie Custis Secondary School.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamilton/excel-in-style-9.7129774?cmp=rss

Textured Hair Education is Now Law: A Bold Step Toward True Inclusion in Cosmetology

For decades, beauty schools across America have failed to teach students how to properly care for and style textured hair. This blatant oversight has left generations of Black and Brown clients feeling overlooked, disrespected, and forced to search tirelessly for stylists who can provide the basic standard of care everyone deserves.

States Taking A Stand

Now, eight states have taken a stand, passing laws that require cosmetology schools to include textured hair education in their curriculum. As of July 2025, California, Connecticut, Louisiana, Maine, Minnesota, New York, Vermont, and Washington will ensure that future cosmetologists are equipped to work with all hair types – not just straight or loosely wavy hair textures.

Black Hair Matters

This is more than a law; it’s a declaration that Black hair matters. Our coils, curls, and kinks deserve the same respect, professionalism, and expertise as any other texture. It’s a milestone that brings us one step closer to ending the systemic erasure of Black beauty from professional standards.

But while we celebrate this victory, it’s equally important to understand why cosmetology must remain regulated by law.

Stop Downplaying the Importance of Licensing

When people downplay the importance of licensing in the beauty industry, they ignore the science, skill, and sanitation practices necessary to keep clients safe. Hair care is more than styling – it’s understanding scalp health, chemical processing, sanitation standards, and cross-contamination prevention. Without regulation, anyone could claim to be a professional, putting the health and confidence of clients at risk.

Imagine a stylist performing a relaxer or lightening service with no knowledge of hair porosity or scalp conditions. The result could be permanent hair loss, burns, or lifelong trauma.

Regulation is Vital

This is why regulation is vital. Cosmetology isn’t just art; it’s science, safety, and care. Requiring textured hair education isn’t just about fairness – it’s about ensuring that all licensed professionals are truly prepared to serve the diverse world we live in.

To those states leading the way: thank you for honoring Black hair, Black culture, and Black dignity. To the rest of the nation, it’s time to step up. Our hair is not an elective. It is not optional. It is essential.

#blackHair #hairCare #texturedHair

Here in the US, I feel rage when white +nonBlack people like to watch our Black bodies do sports, sing, + dance, but try to police how we use the symbols of the various cultures of Black folks, like with our hair

https://youtu.be/80b_Ei4AiTg?si=7BWu69dydL1GimSv

#BIPOC
#BlackMastodon #culture #dreadlocks #braids #twists #strands #CoIoredHair #4C_Hair #4BHair #3C_Hair #AfroHair #TexturedHair #SchoolToPrisonPipeline #Caucasity #conformity #WhiteNonsense #education

Racial Discrimination Leads to HUGE Lawsuit

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