After musician and Cities 97 morning show co-host Keri Noble traded her long tresses for a mid-length cut, her stylist, Charlie Brackney, was inundated with requests from clients who wanted a copycat look. So much so that Brackney, founder and creative director at Haus Salon in Minneapolis, dubbed the haircut "the Keri."
He didn't need to give it a name. It already had one: bob.
The blunt cut that falls anywhere between the jaw line and the shoulder has become the style du jour. Just as it was in the 1920s. And the '60s. And the '80s. In fact, the bob has been a go-to style for nearly a century.
"Some form of the bob is always in fashion," said Woody Theis, the top stylist at Juut Salonspa in downtown Minneapolis. "Texture and lines change, but the idea of the bob — its basic concept — is always in."
In fashion and beauty, what's old is often new again.
"The bob is definitely on its way back," Brackney said. "And it looks very different from the bob of yesteryear."
The new bob varies in length and is softer than the bobs of the past. Adding texture and accessories, like a bang or wave, and headbands or hair pins, gives the cut a more modern look.