The invisible haircut that's turning heads
She has been cropped, bobbed, undercut and extended, styled into gravity-defying updos and waist-skimming waves - not to mention coloured every shade from inky black to pillar-box red.
However, when hair chameleon Rihanna recently stepped out with yet another new look - a questionable, bleached blonde mullet reminiscent of vintage Rod Stewart - it seems the girl who never misses a trend missed a trick: the invisible haircut.
For, as the spring/summer catwalks attest, the backlash against the over-styled and over-exposed has begun. The top look this season is not just natural but barely visible.
"I think the days are long gone when we all want a trendy haircut. Invisible anti-haircuts are relevant right now," explains session stylist Luke Hersheson, creative director of the eponymous salons. "What we have been seeing in recent seasons is a return to the more effortless style of the 1990s. Céline's latest collection was especially minimal - and the models' hair matched up to that."
However, when hair chameleon Rihanna recently stepped out with yet another new look - a questionable, bleached blonde mullet reminiscent of vintage Rod Stewart - it seems the girl who never misses a trend missed a trick: the invisible haircut.
One can become a hair chameleon in a matter of minutes. Elite have worked with the hair salon Peek-a-Boo to come up with five variations of fibre, clay, mud and wax. With Spiky Web Fibre you can have a more defined eye-catching head of hair with



