Describing Black Hair in Fantasy (Locs, Braided Styles, etc)
Image: Describing Black Hair in Fantasy, Braided Styles
How do you describe afro hairstyles in a world where the words donât exist?Â
My advice for describing afro hairstyles effectively in fantasy is to:
Describe the style
Use words from the term in the description
Have someone read it; do they know what youâre describing?
Describe the style.
What does this hairstyle look like, exactly? What is a braid? What are dreadlocks? How do you braid, or how do you form this particular type of braid?Â
Look up existing descriptions of the term, and use language from the definition. Combine, reword and trim as necessary. Thereâs no need to be wordy. A well-constructed sentence or two should serve its purpose.
Great sources are everything from hair glossaries (especially those found on Black hair websites) natural hair vlogs, and even the thesaurus.
Here are some word associations to play with:
General Textures & Looks
Tight
Loose
Thick
Thin
Dense
Light
Heavy
Springy
Silky
Sheen
PorousÂ
Afro Texture and Curls
Afro / Fro
Cloudy
Coils
Corkscrews
Crimped
Curly
NaturalÂ
Poufy
Ringlets
Spirals
Texturized
WavyÂ
Braids
Crossed
Folded
Interlaced
Layered
Looped
Plaits/Plaited
Rolled
Woven
These words can help be more specific with the look of their hair/hairstyle. Tight, tiny braids. Cloudy puffs of hair in twin pigtails.
Use words from the term itself in the description. Â
Readers should get an âahaâ moment when you do this. Twisted hair probably mean twists. Bantu knots resemble knots.Â
Cornrows:Â
Cornrows get their name from rows of corn with connections to African chattel slavery. Say you have a character with this style, but those historical connotations donât exist in this world , or corn isnât something your character would know about. There are still ways to make the connection.
Example: âShe wore her hair in neat rows of braids along her scalp.âÂ
The key word here is rows.
Assuming you can use a part of a word that does exist in your timeline, use it for the strongest connection to its real world counterpart. See the next example:
Dreadlocks / Locs
Another Black hairstyle with history to its name, it may not make sense to use the term in your setting (and also, due to that history, âlocsâ is preferred term) However, you likely could still slip the word âlock or lockedâ into your description to clarify for readers what youâre getting at.
Example: âHis skin was the same medium brown as her own and that of her people, but his hair was thick and coarse and pulled into the rough locks that looked like braids but werenât, like the people to the south whose skin was darker.â
-By Shira Glassman, A Harvest of Ripe Figs, Mangoverse Book 3
Whatâs particularly great about this description is:Â
The use of locks or locked hair to make the connection to dreadlocks.
Connecting the hairstyle to a certain people. It isnât just a style anyone can wear, but it has regional roots and is worn by a particular group.
Adding other indications of race such as brown skin, and the nod to him coming from a place where the people have dark skin.
Have someone read it.Â
Have more than one person read your description. It would be great if at least one of those people is Black (and/or familiar with the style). Does the reader know what youâre trying to describe? Are you being concise, or over explaining it to the point of confusion? If your readers can name the style or picture it relatively quickly, then youâve got a winner.Â
The next time I see one of those âmillenials will be photographing the end of the worldâ posts Iâm gonna scream because let me tell you, I just went through a natural disaster and Snapchat literally saved peopleâs lives. Thanks to snapchat I knew exactly what roads were flooded, what stores were open, what my HOUSE looked like (since I wasnât there), and which shelters I could go to. People were snapping/tweeting asking to be rescued and THEY WERE. I didnât get my news from the tv, I saw it in real time on social media and I will never not be grateful for that.