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Aside from French people being slim and rude , another myth floating around about French people, well women, is that they don’t shave! Hairy armpits and legs are everywhere, right? Wrong.
Let me start off with a little anecdote from when I lived in New York City. I was at a popular midtown nail salon on afternoon getting a pedicure when a woman came in, sat down and started to roll her pants up for a pedicure next to me. What I saw made me do a double take although I seemed to be the only one who was kind of surprised at the sight of her hairy legs. This was not the type of leg hair that was awaiting a fresh wax, but long, unkempt, never tended to leg hair like a man’s.
There’s nothing wrong with this but it’s not a common sight.
The nail tech just did her job like it was nothing. Now, if I had been a foreigner just visiting New York on vacation and getting a pedicure next to this woman, I might be inclined to think that Americans don’t shave their legs. Major generalization, yes, but that’s how these things start….
So if we’re talking about Americans, in general, we shave. Hairy armpits and legs aren’t the norm for the majority of American women… or the French!
It seems to have originated in the 1940s when GIs were stationed in France just after WW2. Although times certainly have changed, the stereotype is still there and people still ask me if French women shave. You don’t have to look far to find instances of this French women not shaving stereotype (or the one that says the French are rude ).
Maybe not every single French woman, but overall, yes, yes, yes. French girls shave! As for the “are French women hairy” question, guess that depends on the woman.
I’m sure there are French women who choose not to remove body hair (all over the world) for whatever reason, but I assure you that shaving is all and well in France just like it is in the US. In fact, waxing is actually a bigger deal here than shaving is and salons all over advertise their waxing specials year round . It’s actually quite affordable and if you can put up with a little pain, it’s the way to go and so very French.
But you’ll also see a wide variety of shaving cream, razors, and depilatory creams in French supermarkets all for hair removal. Laser hair removal in France is also somewhat common.
So shaving, as with a lot of things, just boils down to personal preference and is just as common in France as it is in the USA.
What’s your take on shaving? Are French women hairy? Do French women shave in you experience?
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Good one. I do not come from an affluent family, and yet I have always known all the women in my family (me included) to wax their legs as far as I can remember. As you point out, waxing in France has always been affordable. When I studied in the US during my college years in the 1980s, I could not believe waxing was only available in a couple of high-end spas or hotels in town (and way out of my budget.) I hated having to shave my legs for a whole year. Interesting stereotype. Can you imagine how brave so many of the good G.I.s were during WW2 to marry all these French girls and bring them back home where their neighbors likely nicknamed them “Yacks” or “Yetties” Veronique (French Girl in Seattle)
Hi Veronique, yeah waxing hasn’t really caught on for the majority in the US. Maybe it’s the pain, time it takes to grow out or the price. But yup, French women do seem to love it! Thx for commenting!
I’m sure this myth comes from people who are annoyed by the other cliché that every french woman are beautiful. Not from the WWII. It’s a reaction.
You’re asking for reader’s take on shaving, so here’s mine: I openly admit I don’t.
Well, I have several reasons for it. First, I’m asexual, so I have no desire to be sexually attractive. Second, I’m a feminist and I rebel against the idea of all women having to look the same, of an “M” in ID equaling hairy legs and an “F” in ID equaling smooth legs. People have a right to be more diverse. Third reason: I suffer from rather severe allergy and any attempt to remove my leg hair just irritates the skin. I always had a terrible rash after waxing. My mother doesn’t accept my view and she kept trying to convince me to do laser – she said that yes, it may hurt, but later one doesn’t have to worry about depilation anymore – luckily, I’m already at the point where I can say: I really just don’t want to have smooth legs.
I don’t dress in a too conventional style – I love hippie clothes and I for example hardly ever wear a single-color shirt; I also dress very modestly when it comes to “percentage” of exposed areas. I just don’t like showing too much due to my asexuality and allergy, for example a comfortable neckline for me should be not lower than the collar-bone. So I also wear almost exclusively long pants (yes, also in the middle of the summer) and occasionally long skirts. However, I sometimes wear capri pants just to shock people with visible leg hair and calf muscles.
Emu – a 30+ woman in Poland
Hi! Thanks for sharing your perspective. Hair removal is a funny thing — a societal “norm” that most American women conform to, a big money maker for shaving product companies and something men come to expect. But not everyone has to take part and it’s our right to do as we please, so again, thanks for your comment!
I really hate this. “Stop your slander! French women shave! It would be so gross if they didn’t.”
No, it’d be just fine if they didn’t.
The French didn’t wash or shave much in 1944, they had little or no soap (rationing) and had to do with home made replacement, ashes and fat that couldn’t be eaten, things like that. Metal was rare, razors were at a premium and if men could have a shave in a barber shop women didn’t have that available. They also had nearly no food left which led to the stories that they were not nice or generous towards US troops expecting fine wine and good food (the front line soldiers got the wine hidden from the Nazis, the rest got nothing as there was nothing left).
With the French bashing that went on and on after the Irak disagreement all those old stories were dragged out and brushed up and presented as truth. I have to admit that it can sometimes be tiring for a French woman to hear Americans ‘jokes’ about it. I’m bookmarking that page to send back to them. Thanks for it.
Hi Caroline, thanks for your insight. Many stereotypes are rooted in history and this one was no exception. Thank you for stopping by!
Honestly, the whole notion comes from French porn: it was always super skinny and super haiiry emotionless women. Same reason we all think Germans have HUGE hairy triangles!
Hahahha, thanks for your insight Lloyd! Will take your word for it. Bon week-end !
Women shaving their body parts was much more promoted by the Americans than anyone else. Shaving is not natural but something promoted by society when it became more modern.
Wow/ lol/ all said and done/ there’s nothing better than a soft smooth woman/ lickable/ a
As the husband of a beautiful French woman I have heard this question many time from my friends. I also don’t get it. I have many women in my extended family and all of them shave. Legs and armpits. Amazingly most of them are more concerned with personal hygiene than people assume. It is funny that that is the question that a lot of friends asked me when my wife first came to meet me on vacation. I would have thought of 100 better and more interesting questions. C’est la vie!
It is ridiculous that a crazy stereotype from WW2 is still making its way into conversations in 2015. And related to hair removal, it almost seems like the French are obsessed with waxing. So many epilation places!
From experience I can tell you that there are youngish French women in their 20s that like having hairless bodies!
It’s the opposite , they are obsessed with shaving, particularly the younger generations. They even shave their intimate parts (yikes)
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Adele Labo, 16, was harassed at school in France for not shaving her body hair. She had leg hair and arm hair; her classmates deemed this to be unacceptable.
It’s an experience shared by women all around the world who are held to absurd standards of appearance and abused if they don’t fall in line.
“I think society stigmatises women, there is massive social pressure over body hair,” she told The Guardian .
But Labo wasn’t going to cave. She’s a budding artist who explores what it means to be human and depictions of body hair often end up in her work . In the past, she could just turn to her art to dull the sting of bullying.
This time, she wanted to show that female body hair is perfectly normal and wonderful and that millions of women embrace this fact.
So she created the hashtag #LesPrincessesOntDesPoils (Princesses have hair) and was soon inundated by tens of thousands of supporters. It’s a clever subversion of the impossibly flawless “princess” concept that is foisted on girls everywhere. If princesses are flawless and they have body hair, then body hair is not a flaw.
Many of the resulting images show armpit hair or leg hair. Others show men in solidarity and others add a humorous bent to the topic by showing pets.
Love the art of Ayqa Khan focusing on the normality of women's body hair #LesPrincessesOntDesPoils @womensart1 pic.twitter.com/slfyQJpoKE
#LesPrincessesOntDesPoils used the pretty filter because pretty and hairy aren't mutually exclusive ❤️ pic.twitter.com/FYa429IsCs
Overall, they convey the same message: women having body hair isn’t a big deal. Women should be able to grow their body’s hair however they want and not be militantly scrutinized.
There has been a good deal of backlash, as expected. Many people can’t stand the sight of women with hair and have spewed hateful things.
Regardless, #LesPrincessesOntDesPoils has had a powerful effect and is hopefully giving young girls the confidence to embrace their bodies however they are.
Social media is a stressful place for many young girls who face a staggering amount of bullying and harassment online . A body-positive social movement like this can help to counter the meanness.
Throughout most of human history, women didn’t feel the need to shave the hair that grew on their bodies — leg hair, arm hair, stomach hair, back hair, face hair and wherever else.
It was only in the early middle of the 20th century that body hair removal started to catch on as women were targeted by marketers who cooked up new insecurities and then sold products to address them.
One such insecurity they targeted was body hair, which could be positioned as a male versus female issue. In this new narrative, a women who had hair was grossly masculine.
Gillette created the first razor for women in 1915 and sold it with a message that defined body hair as “unsightly,” according to The Guardian .
Since then, advertisements, TV shows, movies, magazines, and other forms of mass media have been relentless in their depiction of women without body hair.
Obviously, this toxic strategy has been extremely effective. The US shave industry is $13 billion .
But there’s a gathering movement that aims to remove the stigma of female body hair and excessive preening in general.
Girls and women are recognizing that they are beautiful as they are, and that they don’t have to be bullied and warped by social pressures. And that they can have body hair and celebrate it.
Kyle is a self proclaimed expert on beautiful women around the world. He's a digital nomad who has been writing about sex and relationships since leaving his dead end job in finance over 10 years ago.
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Home » Women of the World » 20 Hottest French Girls
Picking the hottest French girls was not easy, not at all. Think about it. Picking the hottest French girl is like trying to pick the prettiest rose. All French girls are hot. Saying the hottest French girl is like saying the wettest ocean. If they are French and they are female they are hot.
See, the photos of women below. Those women are not French, but they are hot. And, if you click on their photos you have a chance to actually meet them. Exactly, why is this not worth at least considering? Are you married or perhaps a monk? If so, keep scrolling, but if not you should click on one of those photos and investigate international dating.
Now, it wasn’t hard for us to find hot French girls to put on the list of most beautiful women from France. Without further ado, it’s time to present our list of hot French women.
Pauline Hoarau is a young model born in Réunion,
France. After she started modeling full-time, she moved to New York City, where
she currently lives.
Her career started off strong. She won the Elite Model
Look competition when she was just 17. After signing a contract with the Elite
Model Management group, she started working with the most famous high-end
brands.
She represented
Tommy Hilfiger, H&M, Jason Wu, Ralph Lauren, Armani Exchange, and Topshop. In addition, she appeared in
popular fashion magazines Elle,
Interview, Harper’s Bazaar, Teen Vogue, Vogue, LOVE , and so on. So, she
earned a special spot on our list of hot French girls. Since she’s only 25
years old, we expect to see even more from her in the future.
At the age of 38, this actress is proof that some
women can become even more beautiful as the years go by. That is why our list
of hot French women starts with Élodie Yung.
Élodie Yung is a popular French actress. The role that
made her beauty and acting skills known to the world was Elektra in the Netflix
series Daredevil and in the
miniseries the Defenders, where she
reprised her role.
This actress has both French and Cambodian roots,
which makes her beauty unique. But she is more than just a pretty face. As a
nine-year-old, she started practicing karate and earned the black belt in her
late teens. She then got her law degree at the prestigious University of La
Sorbonne in Paris. However, over time, she realized that law is not her
passion, so she decided to study acting at the Academy of Music and Dramatic
Art in London.
Élodie got her first acting role in the movie Les fils du vent . After her debut,
French directors noticed her and offered her roles in popular movies and TV
shows such as The Girl with the Dragon
Tattoo, Les Bleus, and Gods of Egypt.
Adèle Exarchopoulos is another actress on our list of
hot French women. This beautiful twenty-five-year-old French actress starred in
movies Trouble at Timpetill, Boxes, and
Le Fidèle . But, most people know her
by her role of Adèle in the movie Blue is
the Warmest Color.
Even though her last name indicates Greek roots, this actress was born in Paris in 1993. As the child of a nurse and a guitarist, acting wasn’t the logical choice for her.
However, from a very young age, she expressed the love for disguising and acting. So, she started taking acting lessons and landed her first acting role when she was 12. Since then, she starred in more than twenty movies.
Her great acting skills got her the prestigious
Trophée Chopard Award and the César Award. What’s more, she became the youngest
artist in history to receive the Palme d’Or award at the Cannes Film Festival,
proving that she is as talented as she is good-looking.
We couldn’t make a list of hot French girls without
mentioning Melanie Thierry. This beautiful thirty-seven-year-old woman is a
world-renowned actress and director.
Melanie Thierry started out as a model in France, but
she soon realized that modeling isn’t for her and decided that acting would be
a better fit. It quickly became clear that it was the best decision she could
have made.
She started acting in many French movies, and at the
age of 18, she became a part of the box office hit The Legend of 1900. After this role, she has caught the eye of the
best directors all over the world.
As a result, she earned a role in a BBC drama Charles II: The Power and The Passion .
Then, at the peak of her career, she got a leading role of Aurora in the 2008
Hollywood movie Babylon A.D . She was
also a part of popular Hollywood movies such as The Zero Theorem, as well as numerous award-winning French films.
For her many roles, beautiful Melanie Thierry received
the César Award for Most Promising Actress, the Best Young Actress award at the
Luchon International Film Festival, and the Order of Arts and Letters Award.
As Miss France 2012, Delphine Wespiser had to make it
to our list of hot French women. After her beauty became known throughout the
country, this girl made the most of her fame by becoming a model, television
presenter, and, surprisingly, a politician.
Delphine Wespiser was born in 1992 and has spent most
of her childhood and teens in the Alsace region. She then decided to study
International Business Management at the IUT of Colmar. But, in 2011, she made
a life-changing decision to enroll in the Miss Alsace pageant. She became Miss
Alsace, and, two months later, she got the famous title of Miss France.
Delphine decided to spend her year as Miss France by giving back to the community, and she continues to speak for causes she believes in today. She is the spokesperson of a lot of charities such as Caravane de la vie which raises awareness about the importance of donating blood.
Furthermore, she is an advocate for animal rights. She uses every opportunity to promote the International Fund for Animal Welfare and is a vegetarian herself.
In 2014, Delphine made the unexpected decision to
change her career. She got into politics and she now serves as one of eleven
advisors of her town, Magstatt-le-Bas.
We couldn’t make a list of hot French women without
mentioning Alizée. She is a French singer, dancer, and a voice actress. She
became famous i
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