Chignons et Tresses Hairstyles
Updos and braids are where hairstyling becomes genuine craftsmanship.





How to Use This Hub
Start with a subcategory below. Each section groups styles with similar maintenance, length behavior, and finish so you can compare quickly.
Coiffures Tressu00e9es
37 stylesBraiding is one of the oldest hair practices in human history, with evidence dating back 30,000 years to Africa, where braided patterns…
Tresses au Crochet
10 stylesCrochet braids are a protective styling method where extensions are looped through a cornrow base using a latch hook (crochet needle).
Coiffures sur le Cu00f4tu00e9
3 stylesSide hairstyles shift the visual weight of your hair to one side of the head, creating asymmetry that flatters most face shapes.
Coiffures Chignon
3 stylesAn updo is any hairstyle that lifts hair off the neck and shoulders, from a quick messy bun at your desk to…
Tissages
2 stylesWeave hair refers to any style where extension hair is sewn, bonded, clipped, or glued to your natural hair or a cap…
Updos and braids are where hairstyling becomes genuine craftsmanship. A good braid isn't just hair woven together - it's controlled tension, clean partings, consistent sizing, and an understanding of how the hair will settle over the next 2-8 weeks. A great updo holds through a six-hour event without a single pin shift. These styles demand skill, and the difference between a professional result and a DIY attempt is usually obvious.
Braided styles span an enormous range. Box braids - from micro (pencil-thin, 8-12 hours to install, $150-$350) to jumbo (1-2 inches thick, 3-5 hours, $100-$200) - are a staple protective style for textured hair. Feed-in braids lay flatter against the scalp than traditional cornrows because hair is gradually added rather than knotted at the root, reducing tension and giving a more natural look. Crochet braids use a latch-hook technique to attach pre-looped hair to cornrow bases - they're faster to install (2-3 hours, $80-$180) and easier to remove than individual braids. Knotless braids have largely replaced traditional box braids in many salons because they start with your natural hair and feed in extensions gradually, which puts less stress on the hairline.
Updos range from simple low buns and chignons to elaborate multi-layered constructions for weddings and formal events. A professional updo for an event runs $65-$200 depending on complexity. Ponytails - high, low, bubble, braided - are technically updos and absolutely count as styled looks, not just gym hair.
These styles suit almost everyone, but a few things matter. Braids require enough length to hold the weave - generally 2+ inches of natural hair minimum. Updos need bobby pins and elastics that match your hair color, not contrast with it. If you have very fine, slippery hair, texturizing spray ($10-$20) before an updo adds the grip your stylist needs. If you have thick, heavy hair, a secure updo might use 30-40 bobby pins - that's normal, not excessive.
Tension headaches from braids shouldn't last beyond the first 24-48 hours. If they persist, the braids are too tight and you should go back to have them loosened - don't tough it out, because consistent excessive tension causes traction alopecia, and that hair loss can become permanent.
See how braided and updo styles frame your face before committing to hours in the chair - try them on with the AI tool.


