davisbr88
Well-Known Member
Based on my personal observations, out of me and my friends in elementary school , the girls with the longest hair (WL+) were all dark skinned and garden variety black (myself included) with coils in the 2c-3c/4a range, whereas who were more phenotypically mixed looking had slight shorter 4b APL-BSB hair. Therefore, it struck me as odd that many people do not associate looser hair types with 100% black people, especially dark skinned black people. Nor did I associate light skin or other phenotypically mixed features with looser hair textures, because I had seen almost the exact opposite all my life.
I won't comment on the rest of this thread, but I found this very interesting. It's definitely the complete opposite where I'm from. Most of the girls in my class with looser curls and longer hair were light-skinned, and usually mixed, although I do know plenty of light-skinned, mixed women with type 4 hair. But the majority with the 2c-3c were definitely light or mixed. I knew one dark-skinned black girl with hair about 3a/3b, and EVERYONE assumed she was mixed (even though we knew and had met her black parents and black grandparents in person).
Maybe it has to do with regionalism as well?

But now that you guys mention it, there was an influx of Hatians in the lower part of the state as well as Louisiana after the revolution. But I don't know about being easily accessible. And alot of WIs have mistaken me for Trini.....hmmm. But my mother happens to look similar to Lorraine Toussaint and my dad very much like David Satcher....if that gives you any idea. 