The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 14, 1988, FASHION SUPPLEMENT - 1988, Page 4, Image 28

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Spice up spring wardrobe
with accessories, makeup
By Chris Carroll
and Kari Mott
Staff Reporters
Accessories—the finishing touch
to any outfit — can be as simple as a
new shade of makeup or as ex pensive
as a gold bracelet. They can mark the
difference between a comfortable
everyday look and sophistication.
For $20 or less, one can buy two
popular, useful accessories.
Baseball caps and sunglasses can
be spotted on campus every day.
They tell of one’s favorite team,
capacity for having fun and spending
power.
Hats advertise one’s favorite beer,
pet peeve, politician or fraternity.
Constant sales over several years
indicate that today’s favorite hat will
be wearable tomorrow. Some stu
dents wear a hat on mornings when
static electricity, not the comb, has
control. At$7.99 fora nylon baseball
cap, hat-collecting is cheaper than
more expensive image-making ac
cessories.
The difference between a $3.99
pair of generic sunglasses and $80
designer sunglasses?
Lanny Tank, manager of Duling
Optical, said that, unlike generic
brands, Bausch & Lomb Wayfarers
have glass lenses. Designer sun
glasses also provide 100 percent ul
traviolet protection, Tank said.
Lanny said Duling Optical «in the
Atrium sells two pairs of designer
sunglasses a week.
Cindy Feerhusen, a clerk at
Thingsvillc in the Centrum, said the
$4.99 generic Wayfarers are avail
able with 100 percent ultraviolet
protection this year. Feerhusen said
students misplace sunglasses and can
afford to replace them at $4.99 each.
Students most often purchase the
generic Wayfarers or the all-weather
style of sunglasses, Feerhusen said.
Also available arc styles known as
the John Lennon and Bruce Willis
looks.
See ACCESSORIES orTS
Spring Fever Sale I
: OVER 120 MODELS OF A THLETIC SHOES ON SALE
Sale Ends April 3
M.V.P. SPORTS NETWORK
"THE STORE SPORTS FANS TUNE INTO"
6440 “O” ST. — NEXT TO GATEWAY 467-5332
ifThe Pink Flamingo!?
cftnf Hfiipsxsion ;jj
i J ■ Be prepared for summer. A
(ij Fashion starts at the top. . .of your head. Jr
J i, As warmth approaches and with The Pink Jr
Jr Flamingo’s new European Coloring System, jr
J " you can have the soft, silky summer shades, Jr
J shadows, and highlights you’ve always Jt
J iB dreamed of. J®
l1 ■ Beautiful shiny hair for work A
i11 and play starts at $25.00. A
j; iinaSnffii I;
1 |1 Monday 10-6/TuesdayThursdiy 9-9/Friday and Saturday 9-5 ■
Mark Davis/Daily Nebraskan
Amy Burke waits for her hair to dry. Burke’s hairdo typifies the flowing look favored this year.
Styles stay the same
Hair forecast: ‘long and flowing’
By William Rudolph
Staff Reporter
It rose to towering heights in the
’50s, it exploded into the world’s
consciousness in the ’60s and ’70s,
and even today hair remains one of
the best ways to express style.
The big word this spring and
summer is texture. Hair no longer
will be “spiky, crunchy,crispy,” said
rn
Julie Ogg of the Pink Flamingo,4(X)3
O St., ‘‘but soft and flowing.” And
that applies to both men and women.
Contrary to what now dominates
college campuses, stylists agree that
men will be growing their hair longer
this year, a style already adopted by
singers like Sting and John Cougar
Mellcncamp.
Deborah Sikyta, owner of The
Phoenix Hair Artists, 3810 Normal
Blvd., said she predicts an Oriental
influence with a sleek, staggcr-ihc
cyc mane in a high ponytail. But
Phoenix stylist Lisa Stcinhauser
cautions that in Lincoln, “there’s no
in-between.”
“Guys’ hair is either really longer
really short,” said Stcinhauser.
For those reluctant to join the
ranks, long hair today differs Irom
the ’60s because it’s controlled,
clean and sleek. For example, Kevin
Moore, owner of Moore’s Hair Styl
ing, 1219 Q. St., said he foresees a
smooth, 90-degree cut with shorter
sides, a sculpted front and a longer
back.
Women’s hair styles this spring
and summer also emphasize texture.
Fashion magazines are showing
women with shorter hair. But in
Nebraska and especially at the Uni
versity of Ncbraska-Lincoln, women
are keeping their hair long.
Whether hair is long or short,
Moore sees the spiral perm or “un
controllable control” look for
women continuing this spring.
But Angela Brigand of the Phoe
nix said she predicts the end of the
blown-wild look as women go back
to a longer, smoother, rolled look.
Women with short hair shouldn’t
despair, though. Sikyta said shorter
hair projects the attitude that “I wear
my hair the way I want to... my hair
is not rny identity.”
Hair and fashion arc directly
aligned. Women’s shapes this spring
follow tlie sleek look: bolder silhou
ettes and nipped-in waists. Looser
silhouettes will give men’s clothing a
softer look._ _
See HAIR on 5
BRIDAL
Gift Registry
For Brides-to-be
who would love to
have their friends
and families choose
fine accessories
and creative gifts
from the Ail Shop's
unique collection.
Shop Sheldon.
Sheldon Art Gallery 12th & R Sts.