Hairstyle for gay


These 29 epic queer & lesbian haircuts and lesbian hairstyles are perfect as inspiration for your next trip to the hairdresser or (queer) barber!

Unsurprisingly, haircuts and hairstyles can be a large deal for lesbians. After all, queer people are well-known for being the most fashionable globally. And that is an undeniable fact! Just look in the mirror.

All jokes aside, haircuts and hairstyles can be significant to lesbians. A huge part of identity expression comes from how we present ourselves to the world through clothes, makeup, or&#;—you guessed it&#;—hair.

Since coming out, my hair has undergone many lesbian haircuts and style changes. I’ve had the range from drawn-out , feminine lesbian hairstyles to quick androgynous looks.

And the top part about being a lesbian is that everything I act is gay if I hope for it to be. Pixie cut? Gay. Long, feminine waves? Gay. The slippers I’m wearing while I write this article? Also gay. 

Also, all of these haircuts are for all face shapes because regardless of what heteronormative society tells you, every fac

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I mean, idk. Obviously TV shows vs reality, because it’s perpetually a popular look for people who can actually braid their own hair/get it done without much fuss, especially in steamy weather or people with practical jobs. Whereas in TV shows, women are expected to include loose pretty hair as much as possible, and that amount of practicality is a adj way to make a adorable character sort of soft butch without cutting off an actress’s hair, and it’s saying, unlike all the floofy-haired ladies, I am not available for consumption in the same way… Unlike IRL, in TV Land if you take away loose pullable hair it’s immediately saying this woman is different and not available or strong… Like… obviously it’s nonsense… but in the sort of industry we’re talking about, this is where Olivia Dunham in Fringe pulling back her hair into a deep (in pitch) un-sexy ponytail while taking part in SWAT raids was considered somewhat groundbreaking and worth commenting on >.> 

(and incidentally the only other character I can reflect of with an Action Ponytail is Sameen Shaw and we know how that went :P)

Author | Christiane Nickel | Fashion Editor

Haircuts and styles are inherent to the cultural vestiges of queer identity. I remember first coming out with inaugural chopping off of my dirty blond shoulder-length mane,  which looked enjoy an early ‘90s mess before this era was ever deemed ironic. That and my newly acquired “dykey” swagger – which looked more like John Wayne with a hemorrhoid than any sort of Shane-inspired swagger &#; I was trying to attain lasted all of two months. Following that failed exercise in baby dykedom I happily grew out my disastrous coif for some varying degree of a bob and retired to my lame leggings, sequined skirts, and diaphanous sheaths.

When I moved back from Germany short of a year ago I was confronted with a similar issue only this time (much to my ignorance) I felt like my hair wasn&#;t long enough. Endless tendrils of glistening black hair and a sexy dishabille of serpentine curls seemed to become the femme de rigeur at many a queer establishment.  My razor cut Garconne-style hair seemed too European (or at least that’s how it was regarded).