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Zazie Beetz
Bobby-Pinned locks
24th Annual Screen Actors-Guild Awards - Arrival










Voluminous Pixies
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Pops of Color
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Bows


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Banana Bun
Premiere Of LD Entertainment's "Dog Days"
Flipped Up
2017 Baby2Baby Gala - Arrivals
Top Knots

Clive Davis and Recording Academy Pre-GRAMMY Gala - Red Carpet
Bed Head Waves

68th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards - Arrivals
Wet and Wavy


Heavenly Bodies: Fashion & The Catholic Imagination Costume Institute Gala
Slicked Back

Nickelodeon's 2017 Kids' Choice Awards - Arrivals
Sleek Ponytails

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Glossy Strands


90th Annual Academy Awards - Arrivals
Center Part

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IGNAZ SEMMELWEIS may not be a household name, yet his work has benefited most modern families. Born in Buda (now Budapest), Hungary, he received his medical degree at the University of Vienna in 1844. On taking up his post as assistant to a professor at the First Maternity Clinic of Vienna’s General Hospital in 1846, Semmelweis faced an appalling reality —more than 13 percent of the women giving birth there died from a disease called childbed fever. Various theories as to the cause of this disease had been proposed, yet no one had solved the mystery. All attempts to reduce the mortality rate proved futile. Troubled by the spectacle of numerous mothers suffering a slow, agonizing death, Semmelweis determined to find the cause of the disease and prevent it.