The Yves Durif Vented Brush Is My Most Prized Beauty Possession
18.01.2023 - 23:13
/ glamour.com
. It's not a cult-favorite . It's not even the Glamour Beauty Award-winning I dutifully use before blow-drying.
It's actually a much more humble staple: a . But it's not just any hair brush—it's Yves Durif's petite vented hair brush. A small tool that's made an essential part of my day-to-day significantly more enjoyable (and occasionally inspired personal reflection on the rote act of hair brushing). I brush my hair once, sometimes twice, sometimes even three times a day.
I don't really keep count—I just know that I love the feeling. I always have. It reminds me of when my mom would comb my waves as a little girl.
I'm not alone here in reveling in the practice of hair brushing. Some of the earliest combs date back when they were fashioned from bone, , and ivory. Not beholden to a single function, finely carved combs from Egypt's prehistory could also be featured in .
And during the Renaissance, were for well-off Romans who splurged on the tiny luxuries of their time. Even 19th-century Impressionist artists like Edgar Degas were fascinated by the ritual of hair combing. Degas painted this portrait of a —and another one where she . I don't feel any type of way toward most brushes, but Yves Durif's one is something special.
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