The movement focused on natural hairstyles such as the “
Afro”. Different natural hair textures, skin tones, and afrocentric physical features were appreciated and encouraged. Natural Hairstyles represented pride in African heritage and political/cultural allegiance to the coinciding
Black Power movement. African Americans wore their hair with grooming tools such as the
Afro pick. Some picks were molded with a raised black fist at the top.
Prior During the 1950s and early 1960s, hair straightening was seen as good grooming. Natural, kinky, curly styles were not worn very often (in their natural state). Prior to the 1960s African American beauty standards consisted of long hair and lighter skin. Different skin tones and hair textures weren’t celebrated as beautiful in mainstream. Previously hair straightening,
skin lightening, and bleaching were marketed. That marketing and production didn’t stop but by the time the movement came, those practices were options instead of necessities.
Advertising Caroline R. Jones, one of the first female African American advertising figures at the company,
J. Walter Thompson, was in charge of creating a hypothetical Black female cosmetics campaign. More brands began to widen the lipstick, powder, foundation, and blush shades in order to cater to darker skin tones. In 1969, it was reported that over half a dozen new cosmetics lines for Black women had emerged in the last five years. Brands sold their products with pro-Black advertising. TCB Naturals, a hair care line with “Let beauty go to your head… Everything is beautiful.” Pond’s 1979 cold cream tagline was "I wear my face proudly.” Zuri, a makeup brand had “For the women of color” and “Beauty comes in many colors.” These advertisements featured Black women and appealed to the Black female consumers. Advertisements for products enhancing and celebrating natural hairstyles and afros featured Black men, women, children, families, and couples. Brands such as Luster’s S Curl, Carefree Curl, Classy Curls had featured advertisements. The
Johnson Products company was a Black-owned company that launched the infamous
Afro Sheen line of shampoos, conditioners, and sprays, with hair straightening products as well.
James Brown ditched his
conk, a popular straightened hairstyle worn by African American men, for an afro after releasing “
Say It Loud - I’m Black And I’m Proud!”
Marcus Garvey, a political activist once said “Don’t remove the kinks from your hair! Remove them from your brains!”
Results According to a 1960s Newsweek poll, nearly 70% of northern Black people and 40% of southern Black people under thirty approved of afros. Activist
Angela Davis styled her hair in an afro during the Black Power movement that followed. Davis wore it as a sign of Black power and rebellion against white beauty standards.
Kathleen Cleaver, an activist and former spouse to the early leader of the
Black Panther Party, also wore her hair in an afro.
Willie Lee Morrow, a hair care products businessman, invented the Afro pick in the 1960s, originally calling it the Afro Tease. Hairdresser Lois Liberty Jones and journalist John Henry Jones published
All About Natural in 1971. The book showed a variety of different afro styles. The book took a stance against hair straightening and endorsed
Clairol hair products. The book also discussed the history of African American hair. Musicians of the time such as
Diana Ross and
Jimi Hendrix were well-known for their afros. Natural hairstyles like the afro were deemed as unprofessional. The larger afros, mostly worn by women, were considered the more feminine afro compared to men’s afros because they took more effort in maintaining.
Impact In 1971, the Philadelphia Commission on Human Rights received complaints from Black women that got fired or sent home for the wearing their natural afro at work. A hair discrimination case in 1976, J
enkins v. Blue Cross Mutual Hospital Insurance, was held in favor of Jenkins. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled against the employer for bias against afros. This was ruled under
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. == Controversy ==