Pomade
Encyclopedia : P : PO : POM : Pomade
Pomade makes the hair look slick and shiny. Unlike hair spray and hair gel, pomade does not dry and often takes several washings to get it out of the hair.
Most pomades contain petroleum jelly (and in fact petroleum jelly may be used alone as a pomade) and mineral oil, and many also contain some sort of wax. They may also contain perfume and coloring agents.
The origin of the word is from the French word for apple (pomme), as the original purpose of pomade was to impart the smell of apples or other fruits to the hair. This usage is now mostly forgotten. Modern pomades may contain fragrances, but they are not often particularly fruity.
Pomades were once much more popular than they are today. They are associated with the slick men's hairstyles of the early and middle 20th century.
Perhaps the oldest example, and some would say "original" pomade has been "Murray's Superior Pomade", originating in the 1920s; from which the term grew. In the late ' 90s, pomade grew from tradition to a general consumer product meaning any sort of solid "hair-styling product"; including waxes, glues, clays, and a variety of substances marketed under the original term.
In the United States they can still be found in stores or sections of stores containing hair products marketed to African-Americans. Among whites the use of pomades was up until quite recently confined to subculture groups such as punk, goth, and rockabilly.
In the past two or three years, however the product has been overtaken by hairspray and mousse as the preferred methods of dominating unruly follicles.
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