Sunday, September 4, 2016

GLORY J

World's Most Amazing Real Life Rapunzels




1
The Woman with the Longest Dreadlocks
                                                                                           Asha Mandela has a lock on a world record that others might dread: The world's longest dreadlocks. The 50-year-old Atlanta resident has earned the name "the Black Rapunzel" because she holds the Guinness World Record for "World's Longest Dreadlocks," which she has owned since 2008.

Her dreads were officially measured at 19 feet, 6 inches long, but an unofficialmeasurement found that one of the strands measured a whopping 55 feet, 7 inches in length.

Mandela first started growing her lovely locks 25 years ago, after she moved from Trinidad-Tobago to New York and decided to have a more "natural" hairstyle.

She washes the dreads once a week, using up to six bottles of shampoo at a time. Then it takes two days for the locks to dry -- and they weigh 25 pounds when wet. She says that the extra weight of her hair makes her doctors very concerned. They seem to think that she has a curvature of her spine due to the length and weight of her hair

2
The Woman Who Holds the Official Record for the World's Longest Hair                                                                                      Dai Yue Qin, better known as Miss Dyq, is the Queen of long hair in China and the current holder of the Guinness World Record for longest hair. Born in April 1964 in Tong Xiang in the Zhejiang province, South China, she began to grow long hair when she was about 14 years old. 

As her hair length of 3,30 meters (10 ft) attracted more and more attention, she joined several long hair competitions and won prizes. In 2001, she moved to the U.S. It takes her about one to two hours to comb her tresses, which are 420 cm in length now (almost 14 feet!). Washing that shiny flood of hair requires five to six hours every two weeks. 

The 19th Century Band of Sisters that was Famous for Their Long Locks
These days, the biggest stars— like Miley Cyrus and Beyoncé — know that the easiest way to get the world to gawk is to chop off your long locks for a “boy cut.” Then, perhaps, you perform some sexually provocative dance moves on TV.


In the late 19th century, though, the most startling, erotic thing you could do as a stage performer was let down your Rapunzel-esque, floor-length hair. In fact, the first real celebrity models in the United States were known as the Seven Sutherland Sisters, who had 37 feet of hair between them. Sarah, Victoria, Isabella, Grace, Naomi, Dora, and Mary Sutherland sang and played instruments—but no one really cared about that. No, the crowd came to ogle their magical, mythical, uber-feminine hair.

Because Victorian women coveted the sister's luscious locks, the cash came flooding in. The family grew rich beyond its wildest imagination, as the sisters knocked serious political issues off the newspapers' front pages with their outrageous celebrity antics. By the mid-1880s, none of the sisters could walk down the street, with their flowing tresses dragging behind them like dress trains, without being mobbed by starstruck fans

The Brazilian Teenager with Long Hair Who Sold It and Bought a House for Her Family
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GLORY J

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