The stunning ‘henna crowns’ helping cancer victims come to terms with their hair-loss
PUBLISHED: 12:01 EST, 25 May 2012 | UPDATED: 13:55 EST, 25 May 2012
A
photographer is on a mission to transform the bald heads of women
with cancer and genetic alopecia using
the ancient art form of henna. Frances Darwin launched Henna
Heals last year, where artists hand-paint intricate designs onto
women's scalps with a natural plant-based paste, giving them back
their femininity, confidence and power. Using a hairless head as
a canvas, 'the designs are customized and one-off works of art,' Ms
Darwin told Today,
who wants to empower cancer sufferers to feel beautiful again.
Each design take between 60 and 90 minutes for the artist to create, which cost about $100. Ten percent of profits also go into a fund to assist people who would like a henna crown but are unable to afford it. Ms Darwin said: 'For cancer patients, the henna crowns really are a healing experience. This is all about them reclaiming a part of themselves that would normally be perceived as ill or damaged or not nice to look at and making it more feminine and beautiful.'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2149916/The-stunning-henna-crowns-helping-cancer-victims-come-terms-hair-loss.html#ixzz1vuzKEs3d
Henna Heals: Tara Schubert, who has Stage 3 breast cancer,
models her intricate design by Henna Lounge
models her intricate design by Henna Lounge
Henna
has been used since antiquity in countries such as Pakistan, Morocco,
Somalia and India for decorative purposes, to bring the wearer luck,
joy and enhanced beauty. Ms Darwin's Henna Heals is on a path to
make conditional female baldness not only acceptable, but also
chic. Known as henna crowns, the designs are not tattoos,
involving no needles or pain, and last up to two weeks - offering
women who suffer hair loss, and the lost sense of self, femininity
and confidence it brings, a chance to feel beautifully adorned while
at the same time also inviting dialogue about a sensitive subject.
Henna crowns: The designs offer women suffering hair loss, and the lost sense of femininity it brings, a chance to feel beautiful -as Sandee Waite discovers with her design by Tarquin Singh
Painted canvas: Kelly, who only gave her first name, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2011 and recently finished her last chemotherapy treatment, believes the Henna crowns are a healing experience
Ms
Darwin was inspired to start Henna Heals when she first saw the henna
crown's power to transform. While taking pictures of a breast cancer
patient whose head was adorned with a henna crown,the woman told Ms
Darwin she had never felt as beautiful, even before she had
cancer. Ms Darwin knew she wanted to continue empowering
women to feel beautiful and confident, while at the same time helping
to de-stigamatize hair-loss.
Cleverly chic: Tara Schubert models another design by Henna Lounge, promoting positive conversations and interactions during such a challenging time
Healing team: Henna Heals artists and participants (from left to right) Holly Monster, Luma R. Brieuc, Sandee Waite, Frances Darwin, Meg Montgomery, Sunni Rochelle, Nadia Bukhari and Tarquin Singh
Each design take between 60 and 90 minutes for the artist to create, which cost about $100. Ten percent of profits also go into a fund to assist people who would like a henna crown but are unable to afford it. Ms Darwin said: 'For cancer patients, the henna crowns really are a healing experience. This is all about them reclaiming a part of themselves that would normally be perceived as ill or damaged or not nice to look at and making it more feminine and beautiful.'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2149916/The-stunning-henna-crowns-helping-cancer-victims-come-terms-hair-loss.html#ixzz1vuzKEs3d
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