Sunday, March 30, 2014

What Should I do with my Hair??! PLZ READ!?




cookiedoug


I have Light Brown Shoulder Length Layered Hair and I want STYLES...NOT Hair CUTS.... I wear it streight and scrunch it ALL THE TIME!! I occasionally Wear it up...but I dont like doing that. Plz Help Me...BTW: I try to curl my hair ALL THE TIME!! But it always ends up turning out horrible. Plz Help me with my hair situation!! ~cookiedough~ luv yas!!
What? You dont even know what I look like...?



Answer
Here are some STYLES not cuts but maybe you should go for a diffrent color like a dark red layered looked or a beach blond or a dirty blond(which is a brown/blond color)or a black look and dark brown and there are also highlight or color at the tips of your hair look:

http://blogs.salon.com/0002007/images/tonica_Pretty_Girl.jpg

http://www.visionweaver.net/kc/Sam/photos/samantha.jpg

http://www.prillycharmin.com/supply/wig_erika14.jpg

http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b65/sare_sare_1/screens.jpg

http://photobucket.com/mediadetail/?media=http%3A%2F%2Fi114.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fn257%2FDietrich_san%2FNew%2520SK%2FKumoriCon06148.jpg&searchTerm=bangs%20with%20layered%20hair&pageOffset=1

http://photobucket.com/mediadetail/?media=http%3A%2F%2Fi133.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fq70%2FBoom_Snap_Clap%2FHair%2FDyes%2FPicture53.jpg&searchTerm=light%20brown%20hair&pageOffset=0

http://photobucket.com/mediadetail/?media=http%3A%2F%2Fi81.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fj227%2Fla_di_da_wtf%2Fgirl%2Fblonde%2520-%2520light%2520brown%2520hair%2Fgirl-green.jpg&searchTerm=light%20brown%20hair&pageOffset=13

I would like to ask about german shepard puppy colors?




Rae M


We have a litter of 8 pups and they look really light brown and we think that they will turn silver and black but we don't know they are not more than a week old
I haven't owned german shepards for to long around 2 and a half years I got my first full blooded AKC registered female free through the IWANA



Answer
(1) You cannot possibly have an AKC-regd german shepard - there is no such task as ARDing, and so no breed has been developed to perform it and so no KC has opened a Breed Registry for it. "My" breed was developed to HERD sheep in the German boundary patrolling way, so is the German Shepherd Dog,
(2) None of the first 50 search results for IWANA had anything to do with dogs, let alone GSDs. Not a good omen for obtaining a breed-worthy GSD from there. Getting it free guarantees that it wasn't breed-worthy.

Patterns, not colours:
All the acceptable GSDs have coats that are mainly black, usually with tan. The patterns are:
â wolf sable - often born almost black, but soon change to a dark-honey colour with just a dark stripe above the spine, until at about 16 weeks their adult coat emerges with a dark tip on each lighter-based guard hair.
â saddle-marked (which includes bi-colours) - born almost black but with tan pasterns, tan cheek-spots & eye-brows, and a tan ring by the anus. (wolf-sables are born with the same markings).
â self-coloured - born black all over, no tan spots.

All 3 patterns might have a white chest spot, possibly also with tiny spots of white on some toes and at the tip of the tail, but in all cases the white should be unobtrusive and the nail of each such toe MUST be black.
The silver you mentioned is allowable, if the black remains good, but it is undesirable.

Unacceptable are:
â yellow-sables - these have the sort of orange-brown colouring seen on Collies and Corgis.
â blues - these have "thinner" black, and the "leathers" (eye-rims. muzzle, lips, pads) are a shade of gray; they have light eyes varying from orange-brown through yellow to blue-green.
â livers - these have much "thinner" black, one that lets the orange centre of each hair reflect light. Their "leathers" are pinkish-brown and they usually have eyes that are lighter than desirable.
â self-whites - born either white or yellowish-white.
â brindles - these have several darker stripes in their tan areas.

Blues and livers can be any of the patterns listed in the "acceptable" category, as the causative alleles do not affect the tan pigment, just the "black" area and the "leathers" and eye-pigment.

Okay...
Without being able to see your pups and their parents (preferably the grandparents, too) I cannot tell whether the pups are wolf-sables that have inherited several genes for colour-paling, or are yellow-sables, or whether you have given a poor description of colour-paled saddle-marked pups.

Breedworthy:
KC Registration does not establish breed worthiness. All it does is show that, generation after generation, various people have signed stating that the parents of their litter were KC-Regd members of the same breed.
⢠Ideally, both your bit.ch and the stud you used will have a Breed Survey Classification (BS.Cl. in English, KKl. in German), as will their parents. This is because a Breed Survey checks every aspect of the pooch against the International Standard of the GSD, and because a pooch can not even enter until it has not just KC Registration but also a show grading of Good or better, a character certificate, hip & elbow certificates, and usually an Endurance Dog certificate as well.
⢠An absolute minimum for anyone breeding largish dogs is that both KC-Regd parents have hip and elbow certificates and the grandparents have hip certificates. Also that both parents have some type of performance certificate in whatever field the litter is aimed at - agility, companion trials, conformation, herding, obedience tests, protection trials, S&R, tracking.

Anyone breeding a litter should know enough about the bloodlines they've used, to be able to provide a printed & signed Guarantee stating that they will pay the cost of treatment needed if the pup develops achalasia or an allergy or elbow dysplasia or epilepsy or hip dysplasia or panosteitis or any other crippling or life-threatening genetic disorder before the dog reaches old age. You don't GET that knowledge except by taking part in GSD activities and the certification schemes, and by talking to people who are active in both, and especially by having an experienced & reputable mentor.
YahooGroups includes 300+ groups dedicated to various aspects of living with a GSD - join some; their Home Page tells you what things they are interested in. Most also allow you to include photos that are the size of the whole screen, so that people can SEE what you're talking about. But you still need a mentor you can actually visit.
If it all sounds like too much effort, neuter your stock as soon as you've given your pups away without any registration.
Les P, owner of GSD_Friendly: http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/GSD_Friendly
"In GSDs" as of 1967




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Title Post: What Should I do with my Hair??! PLZ READ!?
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