32Kviews
To Celebrate The Beauty Of Women With Long Hair, This Photographer Captured 30 Unique Portraits
InterviewToday, we’re presenting a truly unique series of photographs by Irina Werning from Argentina. For 17 years, she has dedicated her work to capturing creative portraits of long-haired women. The project, titled "Dear Long Hair," showcases various images of children and adults who share one distinctive feature: extremely long hair.
The author told us more about the genesis of starting the project: “For indigenous communities, hair is the physical manifestation of our thoughts and an extension of ourselves, and the same is true with the thoughts of Mother Earth like plants growing and rivers flowing in nature. This relationship is based on a profound spiritual connection to Earth that guided indigenous communities to practice reverence, humility, and reciprocity.”
Scroll down to see a collection of unique images, and to discover more about the project and the photographer behind it.
More info: Instagram | irinawerning.com
This post may include affiliate links.
Bored Panda contacted the photographer from Argentina to learn more about her series of photographs. We discovered some details about how the long-hair-themed project came about: “Since 2006, I've been searching and photographing women with long hair in Argentina. Back then, in the absence of social media, I would travel to mountain towns and stay there for months, putting up signs in markets and schools to find them even organizing long hair competitions. For the first ten years, I didn’t really know what I was doing or why. Sometimes you need to work many years on something to understand what you are working on.
After 10 years I started to discover that my project was an anthropological journey into the origins and cultural identity of Latin America today: a story of cultures mixing and old traditions bumping into new ones.”
When I see long hair like this I just think it's in desperate need of a trim.
The Argentinian focused her work on photographing women from Latin America, however, she mentioned that other indigenous communities share some similarities across the world, like native Americans, for example. Irina added: “What makes Latin America distinct is the fusion of these indigenous traditions with the waves of immigration, creating a remarkably hybrid population.”
Irina shared with us that the models posing for her photographs had a great understanding of the meaning of her work: “I think that the people I photograph understand more than anyone what I'm doing: honoring and celebrating their long hair, the patience and love and dedication of years of growing it.” She also said: “I like to collaborate with them and get to know them a bit so that there is something about them in the picture.”
The author of the “Dear Long Hair” series mentioned she's still planning to continue working on the project: “Photographically, it’s a huge challenge to have been working on a project for 17 years. I need to be creative to avoid repetition.”
Lastly, Werning said: “Next year I will make a book and close the project. Now I'm going back to the towns where it all started thanks to the Eugene Smith Grant and will focus on how this tradition is being affected by mainstream global culture.”
Noooo thank you. The weight. The mess. The maintenance. It is so hard to keep clean, and you always have to compensate for it. I've had cousins whose parents wouldn't let them cut their hair. It was like a prison for them. Most of my aunts and many cousins have pixie cuts so they don't have to deal with hair much at all.
I have waist long hair and I do need to be disciplined to keep well maintained but it is possible. Personally I love my long hair. I normally style it into a bun with crochet bun nets and a scrunchie, or a plait. I also loosely plait my hair at night. I rarely wear it loose as it gets in my face.
Load More Replies...I have long hair and love it. My hair goes to my waist. I don't let it get any longer than that because it becomes hard to take care of. My hubby LOVES my long hair and doesn't want me to cut it. It's a personal thing for sure. I wouldn't be able to have hair as long as these gals but good on them if they love it too!
I grow my hair to donate for wigs for children undergoing cancer treatment. I like it long, and I like it short, so I get to alternate.
Load More Replies...Definitely find it excessive. Not nice at all. Imprisoning springs to mind.
I find long hair on men very attractive.
Load More Replies...Fascinating. Been married twice, both wives had "I can sit on it" long hair when we started, and both cut it short-short later on. I loved the long hair, but did not complain when they cut it (beyond a few play-tears) since, obviously - it's their hair. As a student of our species I think I do not understand it all. Clearly long hair confers status, in multiple ways. It takes a lot of work to maintain it. Men and women both love it- but not everyone can afford the time and expense. How does it all fit into our humanity?
Thank you Hidrėlėy for sharing this collection of awesome photos by Irina Werning! I enjoy this so much, it is like seeing a gallery of sisters also with long hair. You've made me a Happy Panda today, Hidrėlėy.
I grew mine out to nearly my waist, but it drove me nuts to wear it down, so I always wore it in a bun with a scrunchie. This past Christmas, I cut it off to my shoulders. Craziest thing (I never noticed having worn it in a bun always) is that menopause had gifted me with wavy/curly hair! My hair had been stick-straight my entire life previously, so this is a welcome surprise.
About 25 years ago I decided to hell with all the blow drying, curling, straightening, b******t and threw all my hair care products in the trash. My hair is well past my waist. I wash it 3 times a week and condition it daily. I comb it and go. No fuss. It takes less fussing over than a lot of women's hair.
Noooo thank you. The weight. The mess. The maintenance. It is so hard to keep clean, and you always have to compensate for it. I've had cousins whose parents wouldn't let them cut their hair. It was like a prison for them. Most of my aunts and many cousins have pixie cuts so they don't have to deal with hair much at all.
I have waist long hair and I do need to be disciplined to keep well maintained but it is possible. Personally I love my long hair. I normally style it into a bun with crochet bun nets and a scrunchie, or a plait. I also loosely plait my hair at night. I rarely wear it loose as it gets in my face.
Load More Replies...I have long hair and love it. My hair goes to my waist. I don't let it get any longer than that because it becomes hard to take care of. My hubby LOVES my long hair and doesn't want me to cut it. It's a personal thing for sure. I wouldn't be able to have hair as long as these gals but good on them if they love it too!
I grow my hair to donate for wigs for children undergoing cancer treatment. I like it long, and I like it short, so I get to alternate.
Load More Replies...Definitely find it excessive. Not nice at all. Imprisoning springs to mind.
I find long hair on men very attractive.
Load More Replies...Fascinating. Been married twice, both wives had "I can sit on it" long hair when we started, and both cut it short-short later on. I loved the long hair, but did not complain when they cut it (beyond a few play-tears) since, obviously - it's their hair. As a student of our species I think I do not understand it all. Clearly long hair confers status, in multiple ways. It takes a lot of work to maintain it. Men and women both love it- but not everyone can afford the time and expense. How does it all fit into our humanity?
Thank you Hidrėlėy for sharing this collection of awesome photos by Irina Werning! I enjoy this so much, it is like seeing a gallery of sisters also with long hair. You've made me a Happy Panda today, Hidrėlėy.
I grew mine out to nearly my waist, but it drove me nuts to wear it down, so I always wore it in a bun with a scrunchie. This past Christmas, I cut it off to my shoulders. Craziest thing (I never noticed having worn it in a bun always) is that menopause had gifted me with wavy/curly hair! My hair had been stick-straight my entire life previously, so this is a welcome surprise.
About 25 years ago I decided to hell with all the blow drying, curling, straightening, b******t and threw all my hair care products in the trash. My hair is well past my waist. I wash it 3 times a week and condition it daily. I comb it and go. No fuss. It takes less fussing over than a lot of women's hair.