Hairy Hippie Chick

Hairy Hippie Chick




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Hairy Hippie Chick




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By April 22, 2017
August 30th, 2017
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During the 1960’s, the ‘hippies’ ushered in a counter-culture movement of peace, free love, and good times that left the world forever changed. And while many of us may not believe it, our grandparent’s generation was most likely a part of that amazing revolution of love.
In a series of pictures, it becomes clear that without drugs, good music, and activism, we would not have the best aspects of the modern world we live in.
A Couple Standing in the Midst of Woodstock 1969
1967, Woburn Abbey, Hippies enjoy themselves at the 1967 Woburn Abbey Love In
A hippy is pictured topless in the crowd at Knebworth rock festival in 1979..
Hippies Dancing in the Middle of a Field at Woodstock 1969
Three Young Hippies Passing Around a Joint
Music Festivals, pic: 22nd June 1970, A young woman topless and covered in body paint draws onlookers at the Music Festival of the Rising Sun at Mantorf, Sweden
Of Course, There Was Plenty of Dancing….Because the Music Was AMAZING.
And After Dancing to All Of That Great Music, They Had to Jump in For a Quick Nature Bath
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German photographer Frank Habicht's glorious snaps are now part of a luxurious volume 'As It Was'
LONDON in the Swinging Sixties was the theatre for a generation in upheaval.
In a stunning new photography volume, Frank Habicht's snaps provide a raw and intimate insight into the decade of cultural revolution.
Habicht's treasure chest of the swinging, groovy, hippie and psychedelic Sixties in London offers his most iconic work, with many images published for the first time.
When the German photographer arrived in London in the 1960s, the pop revolution was still in the starting blocks.
Flower power, free love, "make love, not war" - these are the mottos of a progressive youth culture that longed for profound social and political changes.
Expressing this appetite for change, the generation produced some of the most moving and important fashion, music and political change the world had ever seen.
In 1969 Valerie Mendes wrote about Frank Habicht in the renowned Metropolis Magazine: London without her people would be dead indeed.
Frank Habicht grew up in Hamburg, where he also studied at the Schule für Fotografie (School of photography).
In the early 1960s he moved to London, where he quickly became one of the most in-demand photographers of pop culture.
He has photographed for publications such as The Guardian, Die Welt, Camera Magazine, and Twen.
Frank has produced portraits of music and film greats such as Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones, Jane Birkin, Serge Gainsbourg, Christopher Lee, and Vanessa Redgrave.
His work was featured as part of “Strange & Familiar” at the Barbican in 2016.
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Home MDWfeatures This Woman Dares To Bare In Her Unshaven Pictures To Inspire Other...
Sonia Cytrowska / mediadrumworld.com

© Media Drum Ltd 2016. All rights reserved. Logo by wearestamp.co.uk.

picturedesk - 26th June 2018 0
THIS stunning young woman has embraced her natural body hair with the support of her understanding husband after ditching razors over a year ago and has been fighting against the strict beauty standards of smoothness ever since.
Like most females, secretary Sonia Cytrowska (28) from Gdynia, Poland first started to remove her body hair when she was 12 but thanks to airbrushing in magazines and on television, she constantly found herself comparing her hair to other girls who had more or less hair than her.
Just over a year ago, Sonia decided to stop shaving after she realised that she was removing her hair due to social pressures and finding out that many hair removal methods are bad for the environment and also time consuming. She would spend at least three hours every week to stay smooth which left her feeling down and insecure about her natural look. She started sharing pictures on Instagram under the hashtag, #bodyhairmovement .
Sonia admits that her husband, Tobiasz, of three years struggled with her natural appearance at first but said that their love conquered any of his confusion on the matter.
“I was looking at other body hair positive accounts and it was much easier for me to start my new, hairy life with support of others, both men and women,” said Sonia.
“I’ve been shaving since I was twelve and all my life I was feeling worse and less worthy than other girls who didn’t have so much hair on their bodies.
“I started my Instagram when I was still insecure about my natural look and I wanted to find other women who knew what I felt like and men who won’t be disgusted by my natural appearance.
“At first my husband was shocked because he’s known me for eight years and I was always shaving all my body. And actually, he prefers a shaved appearance but we talked a lot, I explained to him that it is so important for me, to live with my natural body hair and he decided to accept me and support me.
“There were tough times but conscious love and commitment won.
“The hardest thing was to accept myself and to feel confident with my hairy body in front of others, even if they whisper and stare at me. It was hard to accept that sometimes people can reject me if they will know how I really look like. Body hair in my society is a taboo”.
Sonia admits that she does still have days where she feels under pressure to look a certain way but she hopes that through social media she can show other women that having body hair is both normal and beautiful. She shared her advice to others.
“At home, with my husband or friends I feel safe and accepted. I can easily show my body hair and it is natural for me,” she added.
“But it is still hard when I meet new people, for example when I was searching for a new job or going to lectures at university.
“Sometimes there are days where I don’t care what anyone in this world is thinking about my body hair, because I fell in love with my natural body and I believe that every woman should have a choice.
“I choose not to shave because I find myself beautiful and it’s very comfortable to live that way but of course days where I question why I choose to fight with all these beauty standards and ask why I am so stubborn.
“I receive a lot of messages from women who are at the very point where I was one year ago. I talk with them, sometimes we send pics and we support each other.
“My biggest dream is to see women shaved and women with unshaved body hair in the streets of big cities. Both accept each other, because what they do with their body is their choice.
“I hope that my account shows to other women that body hair is beautiful and normal. You can be an independent woman, working in a large corporation, studying in your dream direction, be loved by husband and still have a hairy and natural body.
“My kind of advice is if you are afraid of losing your friends or partner, think about whether you want to live with people for whom you have to pretend to be someone you are not.
“This thought helped me break through at the beginning of my #bodyhairmovement journey.”

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