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This thread is kinda funny to me. I always called them french braids or fishbones (depending on if they were over hand or underhand). I would get offended at them being called corn rows because I had only heard white people call them that. So I automatically assumed they called them corn rows because they were trying to say it was 'plantation' hair. I even went off on a white girl in middle school after she complimented me on my 'corn rows'. ::sigh:: me and my 'magination
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French braid: sections go over each other
Dutch braid: sections go under each other
Corn rows are a lot of tiny dutch braids (but I guess tiny french braids can be used to, though I haven't seen many of those).
I was always told the difference between the two braiding methods was in how the actual hair was braided. In one method you do what is called overbraiding. To overbraid you draw the side hair in over the top and braid overhanded-one hand over the other-plams facing down. Underbraiding is the reverse. To underbraid you draw the side hair in underneath and braid -with your palms facing up.
I'm from Chicago, and only used the term French braids. Arrived in Atlanta, and people here said cornrows. A lot of terms are so different. We called jolly ranchers, wine candy. I got my first whipping with a switch because my grandmother told me and my siblings to stop chunking rocks. I hadn't learned that word yet, so I had no clue that's what throwing rocks meant in the south. That was my first time leaving Chicago, and that whipping taught me I wasn't in Oz anymore.
I have always called "cornrows" french braids. Actually, I never heard the term cornrows until I moved from WI. I never see anyone call them french braids either, so I'm wondering if it was just a local thing.
What do you call the braids below:
View attachment 123145
Born and raised in Chicago and those are FRENCH BRAIDS.I grew up calling them French braids. I am from Chicago.
When I say "wine candy" no one knows what I'm talking about anymore.I'm from Chicago, and only used the term French braids. Arrived in Atlanta, and people here said cornrows. A lot of terms are so different. We called jolly ranchers, wine candy. I got my first whipping with a switch because my grandmother told me and my siblings to stop chunking rocks. I hadn't learned that word yet, so I had no clue that's what throwing rocks meant in the south. That was my first time leaving Chicago, and that whipping taught me I wasn't in Oz anymore.
It's not just you. I felt/feel the same way. I grew up with the term "french braids" and then when Bo Derek wore them in "10" all of a sudden they were cornrows. I still don't really like farm/plantation references from white people.This thread is kinda funny to me. I always called them french braids or fishbones (depending on if they were over hand or underhand). I would get offended at them being called corn rows because I had only heard white people call them that. So I automatically assumed they called them corn rows because they were trying to say it was 'plantation' hair. I even went off on a white girl in middle school after she complimented me on my 'corn rows'. ::sigh:: me and my 'magination
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ManeStreet said:This is accurate. Frenchbraids are braided under and cornrows are braided over. A frenchbraid is not just because it's one braid but because of how its braided. But different regions/areas have different terminology, this is just how I've always known it to be. When I was a kid I learned how to cornrow and how to frenchbraid. Frenchbraiding is more difficult for me and it's looser than a cornrow so it doesn't last.
http://www.chocolatehairvanillacare.com/2011/01/difference-between-french-braids-dutch.html
The image below illustrates, from left to right, the French braid, the Dutch braid (or inverted French braid), and the cornrow.
http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/yy306/chvc/all_three.jpg