Modern Salon
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Badgley Mischka's Romantic Bouffant

Here's a great hairstyle you can take straight from the catwalk and into the salon. Inspired by the collection itself, Peter Gray from Moroccanoil created the "stride of pride." The style is delicately textured, ...

by Chandler Rollins
February 19, 2015
Badgley Mischka's Romantic Bouffant

 

2 min to read


Here's a great hairstyle you can take straight from the catwalk and into the salon. Inspired by the collection itself, Peter Grayfrom Moroccanoil created the "stride of pride." The style is delicately textured, just loose enough, and very sexy. Think glamorous bedhead. Here are the steps to recreate this whimsical special occasion look. 

Step 1: After washing hair, lightly mist with a hairspray, such as Moroccanoil Luminous Hairspray. This will create a strong, shiny foundation for you to work with. Rough dry hair using your fingertips fingertips on low heat to create a loose and piece-y texture.

Ad Loading...

Step 2: Using a large, 1 1/2-inch barrel curling iron, curl two-inch sections of hair. Alternate directions as you do this, then apply more hairspray to create additional definition and hold.

Step 3: For that sexy “bedhead” appeal, use a little dry shampoo or texturizing spray at the roots. This will both mattify and add texture. Try Moroccanoil Dry Shampoo.

Step 4: Begin to gently backcomb hair in 1 1/2-inch sections starting at the crown, toward your forehead. Gray says, “To ensure even crown height, count the number of brush strokes and gradually increase strokes as you work towards the top of head.”

Step 5: After teasing, gather sections from the ear to temple on either side of the head and twist back towards the center. Once at the back of the head, secure with bobby pins and a spritz of hairspray for good measure. Finish with a hair barrette or pin, such as the one pictured. 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Style

Ad Loading...
Ad Loading...
Style|Articles|Feb 23, 2026

The Pixie Cut: A Short Style with a Long Black History

Before the pixie cut became a Hollywood symbol of modern femininity, it was already living, breathing, and evolving in Black culture. Texture expert and Moroccanoil Global Color Ambassador Greg Gilmore gives us an overview of the iconic Black women who popularized the pixie over the past century.

Ad Loading...