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Six fringes that will make a comeback this spring

Bushy, curtain, French, side-parted, side-swept, bottleneck, side-swept… there are few styles more versatile than a fringe cut.

Six fringes that will make a comeback this spring

For this spring, six fringes that come and go as a trend will be among the most desired, including baby bangs, but we will also see lots of XXL fringes, butterfly, Korean…

Choppy fringes look great on all lengths but not on very round faces. This is one of the many fringes (short above the eyebrows) that stylise cuts and will be a big hit this spring 2024, as well as the long, blunt Charlotte Gainsbourg-style rocker fringes, which look great on XL manes, preferably with invisible layers to simulate movement.

British actress Jane Birkin, an icon of the sixties and seventies, inspired and gave her name to another of today’s most fashionable fringes. As Sonia Atanes, training director of Sonia Atanes Hair Beauty salons, says: “It’s hard to remember a legendary actress with fringes and no personality. This is a comfortable and free style, easy to maintain and with a casual and rejuvenating air”.

David Lesur of the David Künzle salons highlights baby bangs in all shapes and sizes, the most notable being the ultra-short, very straight and structured fringe: “We are talking about a short, very short and rather thick fringe that was popularised at the time by Audrey Hepburn. It was also very successful in France with the film Amélie. Without a doubt, it brings a lot of freshness and youth, it is perfectly combinable with all types of haircuts and although it doesn’t look good on round faces. I don’t recommend doing it on very curly hair, but rather on straight hair and on short or very short Jean Seberg type hair, with unevenness in the lines predominating. If your face is more angular and elongated, it’s better with long hair”.

Another one to keep an eye on is the gringe, which is very comfortable and very effective for highlighting our features or our eyes: “It doesn’t require as much cutting as the classic fringe we all know, although it does require a certain volume that we can increase with the hairdryer so that it doesn’t get lost or confused with the rest of the hair. I advise all those who want to try it to let it grow out first so that they can parade it later. It looks great on round faces (better open) and helps to soften square faces” – advises Paul Tudor, director of the David Künzle Fuencarral salon.

Y un flequillo setentero que vuelve es el bottleneck, que combina la técnica del flequillo cortina con los baby bangs, caracterizándose por mechones más cortitos en la parte central sobre la frente, y más largos abiertos en mejillas. 

And now it’s time: side swept fringes are back on trend.

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