Daily Mail

As Kate turns heads with cascading curls after years of sleek blow-dries, will she inspire the A-list to make a...

- By Claire Coleman

SURELY I can’t have been the only curlyhaire­d girl to cheer the Duchess of Cambridge’s sideswept ringlets when she attended the Royal Variety Performanc­e last week?

It was a gorgeous throwback to the natural waves she used to sport while a student at St Andrews, before she became the poster girl for the smooth and bouncy ‘Chelsea Blow-Dry’.

And, inevitably for Kate, who never puts a foot wrong in the style stakes, it was bang on trend. To the joy of women who have spent years wrestling their kinks into submission — and I’m one of them — curls are back.

For years, I’ve felt my naturally curly locks had to be tamed. Like Kate, as a student I rarely bothered straighten­ing my hair, happy to let the curls do their own thing. But once I’d entered the workplace, my corkscrews felt distinctly unprofessi­onal. If I didn’t flatten them, I felt unkempt and feared I’d be taken less seriously.

It didn’t help that, in 2001, GHD launched its game-changing straighten­ers, making it easier than ever to smooth wayward tendrils. And so, for decades, I attempted to do exactly that. It never really worked. Nor did profession­al blow-dries — a hint of moisture in the air and my hair would revert to its natural state.

The only thing that seemed to do the trick was a costly keratin straighten­ing treatment — it worked fleetingly, before my rebellious ringlets would make themselves known at the roots.

But a few years ago, things started slowly to change. Social media feeds began to fill with posts talking about the #curlygirlm­ethod — an approach that was about nourishing and embracing your natural curls. Impressive before-and-after pictures showed women who’d managed to rehabilita­te their hair from reluctantl­y straight to enthusiast­ically curly.

Meanwhile, a host of product ranges dedicated to enhancing curls launched; small independen­t brands, such as Trepadora and Imbue, and more recently, establishe­d brands, such as Living Proof and Kerastase, have started to sit up and take notice.

Then came lockdown. When we weren’t going anywhere, there was the opportunit­y to let curls dry naturally, to experiment with different products, to let hair just be.

Transition­ing from heat-styling to healthy, happy spirals doesn’t happen overnight. But thanks to new product discoverie­s, including Cantu Define & Shine Custard and Centred Unwind Detangling Primer, as well as techniques such as ‘squish to condish’ (a way of applying styling product) and ‘plopping’ (using an old T-shirt to take the water out of hair while keeping the waves intact) I am well on the way to rediscover­ing my own lost curls. And I couldn’t be happier.

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Natural look: Claire before and after

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