Comb over

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This variant of the comb over was patented in 1977.
This variant of the comb over was patented in 1977.

A comb over or combover is a hairstyle worn by bald or balding men in which the hair on one side of the head is grown long and then combed over the bald area to minimize the display of baldness. A comb is used to create this hairstyle.

A variation of the combover (whereby baldness is concealed by long hairs combed in three separate directions) has a U.S. Patent 4,022,227  by Donald J. Smith and his father, Frank J. Smith, of Orlando, Florida, who were awarded an Ig Nobel Prize in Engineering for their effort.

Such is the interest in this hairstyle that a one-hour documentaryComb Over - the Movie – has been made about it

A variation of the comb over is the "walnut whip," named after the chocolate product of the same name. The comb over strands are let grow to an even greater length and then curled round and piled up on top of the head[citation needed].

Another common form of the comb over is the 'Gel-over.' It is like a normal comb-over with the hair over the bald spot-gelled so that it sticks about a centimeter over the scalp.

In Japan, they call men with comb-overs "bar code men," referring to the striations caused by the comb and how similar it is to the UPC on products.

[edit] Famous comb overs

  • Former University of Illinois basketball coach Lou Henson had his combover style termed the "Lou-do"[6] by ESPN announcer Dick Vitale. Earlier in his career, when Henson was a coach at New Mexico State, he sported a close-cropped hairstyle that did not conceal his baldness.
  • Real estate mogul and television reality show host Donald Trump sports a celebrated comb over.[7]
  • Former Québec Premier René Lévesque sported a combover, which earned him the nickname Ti-Poil, literally "Lil' Hair", but more accurately translates in English to "Baldy". [8]

[edit] References