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Page "Hairstyle" ¶ 28
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Stylists and hair
Salon Aprons are important to many Hair Stylists because of their usefulness in protecting clothing from hair color stains and debris such as hair clippings while serving as a place to keep tools quickly accessible.
Stylists and clients have reported acute health problems while using or after using certain hair smoothing treatments containing formaldehyde.

Stylists and .
Some Actors or Actresses have personal Makeup Artists or Hair Stylists.
Stylists compete on deadline to create the most elaborate hairstyle using props, lights and other fantastic accessories.
Stylists and clients may inhale formaldehyde as a gas or a vapor into the lungs and respiratory tract.
From that time forward, United Scenic Artists of America Local 829 grew to include Scenic, Costume and Lighting Designers, Mural and Diorama Artists, Scene Painters, Production Designers and Art Directors, Commercial Costume Stylists, Storyboard Artists and most recently Computer Artists, Art Department Coordinators, Sound Designers and Projection Designers working in all areas of the entertainment industry.
Clothing Stylists and fashion coordinators who do styling for motion pictures, commercials and television would be accepted into this category.
Scores of these artists ( Funk Stylists, Glowstickers Contact Jugglers, Mimes, & The Unknown ) attended raves regularly all throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
Professionals such as Stylists, Accountants, Bankers, Business Owners, Doctors, Educators, Engineers, Lawyers, Entrepreneurs, Executives, Teachers, Medical Professionals, Public Officials, Sales Professionals, Real Estate / Venture Capitalists, Licensed Professionals such as Plumbers, Carpenters, Beauticians, and Professional Athletes regularly attend.
It seeks to stand out as a brand by emphasising its distinctive product selection, retail environments with displays of modern art, and services such as Personal Stylists and Cosmetic Concierge.
* Food Stylists and Photographers – Work with magazines, books, catalogs and other media to make food visually appealing.

often and wash
The best-known is probably fresco, which uses water-soluble paints with a damp lime wash, a rapid use of the resulting mixture over a large surface, and often in parts ( but with a sense of the whole ).
When connecting glassware, it is often tempting to use Keck clips on every joint, but this can be dangerous if the system is sealed or the exhaust is in any way restricted ; e. g. by wash flasks or drying media.
* Acetone is often used for a final rinse of sensitive or urgently needed glassware as the solvent is miscible with water, and helps dilute and wash away remaining water from the glassware.
In his diary, Malmesbury recorded his reservations about Caroline's suitability as a bride for the prince: she lacked judgment, decorum and tact, spoke her mind too readily, acted indiscreetly, and often neglected to wash, or change her dirty clothes.
Because of this, jeans enthusiasts do not wash them often or at all.
For marketing purposes, these bullets are often plated with a thin layer of copper or copper-alloy ( referred to as wash ) and are usually coated with a hard wax for fouling control ( soft, grease, coatings are used in some target ammunition ).
Bivalves are often the most common seashells that wash up on large sandy beaches or in sheltered lagoons.
Chiton plates or valves often wash up on beaches in rocky areas where chitons are common.
Moulted carapaces of a variety of marine malacostraceans often wash up on beaches.
Mid-to-higher end North American dishwashers often come with hard food disposal units, which behave like miniature garbage ( waste ) disposal units that eliminate large pieces of food waste from the wash water.
Such dialects often contain folk-etymological derivatives of French words, for example lavier (" river, stream ") which is a syncopated variant of the standard French phrase la rivière (" the river ") but has been identified by folk etymology with laver, " to wash "; therefore lavier is interpreted to mean " a place to wash " ( since such streams are often used for washing laundry ).
The bear is often privy to Mr. Bean's various schemes and doubles as a dish cloth or paint brush in an emergency ; it has been decapitated (" Mr. Bean in Room 426 "), used as his paint brush (" Do-It-Yourself Mr. Bean ") and shrunk in the wash (" Tee Off, Mr. Bean ").
The head is white but often gets a yellowish wash in adult birds.
Processing the film took considerable time and resources, with people using their bathtubs to wash the film when processing facilities ( often tied to organized crime ) were unavailable.
We also wash our face often to keep ourselves cool.
Cutting fluid is often pumped to the cutting site to cool and lubricate the cut and to wash away the resulting swarf.
It is often assumed that this coloration will wash out when the birds are bathing or after heavy rains, but this is true only if the water used for bathing happens to be very alkaline.
In traditional liturgical churches a laver, often embedded in the wall, exists for the priest and deacon to wash their hands before celebrating the Eucharist.
The viridarium was often bisected or quartered by paths, and often featured a roofed fountain at the center or side of the garth that served as a primary source for wash water and for irrigation, meeting yet more physical needs.
This condition occurs most often among contact lens wearers who do not properly disinfect their lenses, exacerbated by a failure to wash hands prior to handling the lenses.

often and subject's
Psychotherapy also has a role, often when there has been some recovery of the subject's stability.
Erysipelas infections can enter the skin through minor trauma, insect bites, dog bites, eczema, surgical incisions and ulcers, and often originate from strep bacteria in the subject's own nasal passages.
The paintings expressed emotion with wild, often dissonant colours, without regard for the subject's natural colours.
Assuming the subject has been under guard, the screener often can get valuable information about the subject's behavior from the guards.
This is often adjusted for by using shimming coils, small magnets physically inserted, say into the subject's mouth, to patch the magnetic field.
One of Mercer's trademark comedy routines on 22 Minutes was Talking to Americans, in which he would travel to a major American city or institution and conduct on-the-street interviews with average Americans regarding Canadian politics, the weather, etc., often with hilarious results as the subject's ignorance about Canada was illustrated.
In many cases, deportation is generally done either by the government's executive apparatus, and as such is often subject to a simpler legal process ( or none ), with reduced or no right to trial, legal representation or appeal due to the subject's lack of citizenship.
Frontal lobotomy ( sometimes called frontal leucotomy ) successfully reduced distress but at the cost of often blunting the subject's emotions, volition and personality.
Additional variables, such as the subject's sense of social responsibility, need to be taken into account to better understand the mechanisms of social proof across cultures ; for example, more collectivist individuals will often have an increased compulsion to help others because of their prominent awareness of social responsibility, and this in turn will increase the likelihood they will comply to requests, regardless of their peers ' previous decisions.
An official biography ( one written with the permission, cooperation, and perhaps participation of its subject or its subject's heirs ) is often known as an authorized biography.
While visual acuity charts are usually designed for use at 6 meters or 20 feet, there is often also a need to test a subject's vision at near or occupational tasks ( like reading or computer use ).
His portraits were often set in an oval frame, with a subtitle with the subject's claim to fame.
Comparative genomic hybridization ( CGH ) or Chromosomal Microarray Analysis ( CMA ) is a molecular-cytogenetic method for the analysis of copy number changes ( gains / losses ) in the DNA content of a given subject's DNA and often in tumor cells.
The fill light also shines on the subject, but from a side angle relative to the key and is often placed at a lower position than the key ( about at the level of the subject's face ).
In addition, if the nodes fall close to the ascendant or rising sign and the descendant opposite it, there can often be something unusual about the subject's appearance-he or she may be very tall for example.
A performer will often have head shots expressing different poses and expressions to give a potential employer an idea of the subject's range of appearances or expressions.
Brain implants, often referred to as neural implants, are technological devices that connect directly to a biological subject's brain-usually placed on the surface of the brain, or attached to the brain's cortex.
Each article progresses by describing the subject's incarnation in the movies if applicable, and moving on to Expanded Universe material ; finally, there is often a " Behind the Scenes " section which describes the subject's real-world history, inspiration, and production.
Her portraits are often studies of individual heads ( see Laughing Head, 1938, Butler Institute of American Art ); the emphasis securely on the subject's expression – or of solitary nudes.
It is also a fact that the eye can often receive several thousand " damage spots " or lesions to the retina without it causing a significant problem to the subject's visual acuity.
This harsh-lighting problem is particularly important in portrait photography, where a fill flash is often necessary to balance lighting across the subject's face or body, filling in strong shadows that are usually considered undesirable.

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