Minnesota Salsa Fiesta! – Minneapolis, MN

Minnesota Salsa Fiesta! – Minneapolis, MN

Minnesota Salsa Fiesta!

From Paris to New York—5 Hair Trends Currently Dominating the World’s Most Stylish Cities

From Paris to New York—5 Hair Trends Currently Dominating the World’s Most Stylish Cities

I’ve been researching the most popular summer hair trends in some of the most stylish cities in the world, and five distinct patterns have emerged.

Beauty: Whenever I need a little inspiration, whether it’s for hair trends, nail trends, or even fashion trends, I love to check in and see what people are wearing in some of the most stylish cities around the world. I follow many influencers from cities like Paris, New York, Oslo and more, and I’m always intrigued to see what trends they’re backing at any given moment.

This summer, I’m ready to switch up my hair, but I’m not quite sure what to do with it yet. Do I want a fresh hair colour? A bob hairstyle? Or simply to experiment with some new hair accessories? To help me decide, I thought I would round up the biggest summer hair trends that I’ve spotted on stylish city goers and trust me when I say that these looks don’t disappoint.

From trending colour techniques to high-shine finishes and chic fringe hairstyles, there is plenty of inspiration for the season ahead and beyond. No, I might not be globetrotting this summer, but my hairstyle can certainly make it look like I’ve spent significant time in the world’s chicest places.

5 Hair Trends I Keep Spotting in Stylish Cities

1. Fringe Fever in Paris

Five women in Paris all with stylish hairstyles and wispy fringes

First up is Paris. We all know that French women just exude chicness, especially when it comes to their hair, and this summer it seems that wispy fringes are very much in. Yep, I’ve spotted this style all over the streets of Paris, and it’s safe to say that I’m obsessed. Forget curtain bangs or block fringes, as this season it’s all about this more ethereal style.

The trick to this trend is opting for a classic fringe shape but allowing your forehead to poke through to give it a softer and more subtle appearance. Ask your hairdresser to give your fringe a feathered finish in order to get the look.

Shop the Trend:

2. High-Shine State of Mind in L.A.

5 women in LA with super glossy, shiny hairstyles

As I stare out my window in London to watch the rain, I’m definitely dreaming of warmer times spent in California. Not only is it sunnier over there, but it seems that everyone’s hair is a lot shinier, too. Yes, this summer it’s all about that glossy, high-shine finish, as showcased by some of the most stylish people in L.A..

If you’re wondering how you can achieve this look at home, the trick is all in the products that you use. Opt for at-home hair gloss treatments, deep conditioning masks and even hair oils to help give that glass-like shine.

Shop the Trend:

3. Ride the Wave in Oslo

4 women from Oslo with wavy hairstyles

Oslo is my go-to city when I want to know what cool-girl approved trends I’ll be seeing for the season ahead, and this summer I’ve noticed lots and lots of people wearing liquid waves. What are liquid waves, I hear you ask? Think sleek, silky smooth and shiny movement throughout the hair to give that effortlessly chic finish.

Now, these waves might look effortless, but they can be a little harder to achieve. Not to fear, as I’ve got lots of product recommendations to help you get the look.

Shop the Trend:

4. It’s All in the Updo in London

5 women in London wearing updo hairstyles including ponytails, claw clips and slicked-back buns

Us London gals are always on the go, so we want quick and easy hair trends that look put together but can be achieved in seconds. Enter, the humble updo. No, I’m not talking about complicated chignon styles, I’m talking about claw clips, ponytails and slicked-back buns that are perfect for keeping your hair out of your face in the city heat.

I’ve seen so many cool content creators rocking these looks on the streets of London, and I’ll definitely be giving one of these styles a go this summer.

Shop the Trend:

5. Blending in in New York

5 women in New York with balayage and root-smudged highlights

Last but by no means least, New York is giving me all of the hair colour inspiration for the season ahead. Much like hairstyles, when it comes to summer, I want a laidback, low-maintenance hair colour that I know will see me through a busy few months. Enter, the root-smudging technique.

This technique effortlessly blends lighter highlights with your natural roots, making everything look seamless as a result. Yes, this means you can still go lighter without having to spend every 4-6 weeks in the hairdresser’s chair getting your roots touched up. Pretty cool, right?

Shop the Trend:

Grace Lindsay is the junior beauty editor at Who What Wear UK. At the age of 18 she decided to train as a makeup artist before going on to study english and media at Goldsmiths University. It was during that time that she explored her love for journalism by interning at a small beauty start-up based in Shoreditch. Since then, she has worked at a number of publications including Marie Claire and Hello!, where her love for all things beauty continued to grow.

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ICYMI

Minnesota artist weaves human hair into wearable art, reviving an ancient craft! – Grand Marais, MN

Festival of Sail Duluth – Duluth, MN

Festival of Sail Duluth – Duluth, MN

Festival of Sail Duluth 2025

Join us on the shores of the world’s Greatest Lake for the Festival of Sail Duluth 2025!

Enjoy a rare chance to catch a glimpse, step aboard, and even set sail on some of the grandest ships of yore. Draw Events is once again bringing tall ships to Duluth. Festival of Sail Duluth 2025 will feature ship tours, day sails, educational programming, food and beverage, entertainment and fun for the entire family!

NEW for 2025: Don’t miss the Superior High Dive Challenge, a thrilling four-day competition that will make history as the first professional high diving event ever held on the Great Lakes. Elite athletes from around the world will leap from a 66-foot platform into Lake Superior — right from Duluth’s new sea wall. This adrenaline-pumping event is included with your Festival of Sail ticket. Read more and get excited!

Whether you’re a seasoned sailor, an adventure junkie, or a lakeside lounger, this waterfront celebration offers something for everyone. Mark your calendar now — you won’t want to miss it!

The Ships

Come see these historic ships from around the world!

Pride of Baltimore II

Pride of Baltimore II

Alliance

Alliance

Inland Seas

Inland Seas

William A. Irvin

William A. Irvin

When & If

When & If

Liberty Clipper

Liberty Clipper

USCG Cutter Sundew

USCG Cutter Sundew

Abbey Road

Abbey Road

St. Lawrence II

St. Lawrence II

Zeeto Ship

Zeeto Ship

Schooner Charley

Schooner Charley

)Note: These ships are not guaranteed. Stay tuned for updates.)

Event

Festival of Sail Duluth 2025

Thursday, July 10th, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

Friday, July 11th, 10:30 am – 6:30 pm

Saturday, July 12th,10:30 am – 6:30 pm

 Sunday, July 13th, 10:30 am – 5:00 pm

Location

Harbor Plaza

 Harbor Plaza, near the Duluth Entertainment Convention Center (DECC)

Duluth, MN

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Duluth MN Vintage Sailing 70s Nautical Sailboat Premium T-Shirt

ICYMI

How Minnesota reflects 2025’s big camping trends!

With their Morse Code-like mating dance, fireflies are now lighting up Minnesota nights!

With their Morse Code-like mating dance, fireflies are now lighting up Minnesota nights!

Minnesota Star Tribune – Firefly (Radim Schreiber)

Where to look for lightning bugs in the thick of summer.

As summer heats up and humidity thickens the air, Minnesota’s annual spectacle of fireflies arrives. The flashes of greenish to yellowish light flicker at the edge of meadows and moist woods. Or you may catch a solo blinker so brief and intermittent, you wonder if you imagined it.

Fireflies, also known as lightning bugs, are neither fly nor bug. They are a part of the beetle family (Lampyridae) and in the aptly named Photuris genus.

They flash across every continent but Antarctica and in every U.S. state except Hawaii, according to the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation. Minnesota has about six species of fireflies, which light up from late June into July and sometimes August.

The flashes often work like a Morse-code mating dance. Males blink a pattern as they fly and hope a female, often perched on foliage, will flash an answer.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park, in Tennessee and North Carolina, is home to 19 species of fireflies, including 13 that flash. MUST CREDIT: Radim Schreiber. ORG XMIT: 122.0.1216240127Great Smoky Mountains National Park, in Tennessee and North Carolina, is home to 19 species of fireflies, including 13 that flash. MUST CREDIT: Radim Schreiber. ORG XMIT: 122.0.1216240127
A firefly in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (Radim Schreiber)

The added allure of seeing synchronous fireflies, which have the ability to light up in unison in parts of the Great Smokies in Tennessee and South Carolina’s Congaree National Park, has become so popular that there’s a lottery to reach viewing areas.

 

Fireflies produce light through bioluminescence, the same phenomenon observed in some fungi, underwater jellies, plankton, glow worms and fish. The chemical luciferin mixes with oxygen and luciferase in the lanterns on the bugs’ abdomens to create the cool glow.

 

Scientists think fireflies can regulate flashing through their intake of oxygen.

 

A wet spring might give this year’s firefly show a slight advantage, but researchers say firefly numbers are shrinking overall. Causes are thought to include loss of habitat, light pollution, pesticide use and climate change.

A firefly, also called lightning bugs. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The Xerces Society suggests avoiding pesticides and allowing some areas of leaf litter to stay in your yard, as well as adding native plants and shrubs of various heights — all of which benefit a wide variety of pollinators.

 

Reducing artificial light also helps. Turn off outdoor lights, use motion-activated ones or keep lighting low and pointed downward along walkways. Using red lightbulbs offers another option that’s less disorienting to wildlife, including birds.

 

You can also help by logging lightning bug sightings through iNaturalist and Fireflyers International Network.

Event

The University of Minnesota Landscape Arboretum firefly viewing nights

Thursday, July 10th through Saturday, July 12th, 8:30-10:30

Online reservations are required, and each night includes talks by different experts on nocturnal creatures.

Location

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum

3675 Arboretum Drive
ChaskaMN 55318

By Lisa Meyers McClintick

For the Minnesota Star Tribune

Lisa Meyers McClintick has freelanced for the Minnesota Star Tribune since 2001 and volunteers as a Minnesota Master Naturalist.

From Eiffel Tower to bistro chairs: Paris expos take center stage in new release by Minnesota author

From Eiffel Tower to bistro chairs: Paris expos take center stage in new release by Minnesota author

Minneapolis author Charles Pappas came upwith the idea for his book on ‘one of the most dissapointing days of my life.”

Charles Pappas is a senior editor for the Minneapolis-based Exhibitor Magazine, which covers expos, fairs and trade shows worldwide. In June 2023, he was on a work trip in France.

“I was consulting to Minneapolis and the U.S. in their bid for Expo 2027, and the vote was taken in Paris.”

Minneapolis lost the bid to Belgrade.

“The next day, I got up and just decided to take a long, meandering walk in what I can only describe as a dejected daze.”

A black and white photo of an interior sculpture display.

A sculpture exhibition in the Grand Palais at the 1900 Paris Expo.
Courtesy of Luster Publishing

Pappas ended up at the Petit Palais, a palace built for the World Fair of 1900.

“It hit me: Our mental idea of Paris is because of the seven world expos there, that everything that you as a tourist would point to mostly came about because of the World Expo — the Petite Palais, Grand Palais, the Pont Alexandre Bridge, the bistro chair,” Pappas says. “And that just kind of was that eureka moment.”

The book is “Nobody Sits Like the French: Exploring Paris Through Its World Expos,” which is out in the U.S. on July 1st.

The title inspiration came from the aforementioned bistro chair, the now ubiquitous seat traditionally made with bent wood and woven cane that helped define Paris café culture.

You’ve likely seen it closer to home, too. Restaurants like St. Paul’s Meritage — self-described as “Minnesota’s little slice of Paris” — have a patio full of them.

“It’s one of our very basic mental images of Paris,” Pappas says. “But no one ever really thought of what its origin was, and really the story behind this is kind of fun.”

The design is over 150 years old.

A poster of chair designs.

The ubiquitous “bistro chair” (center row, far right) was introduced at the 1867 Paris Expo. “It’s one of our very basic mental images of Paris,” says author Charles Pappas.
Courtesy of Luster Publishing

“It was actually called, originally, the number 14 chair, and it won a gold medal at the 1867 World Expo in Paris,” Pappas explains. “It was so popular, it caught on so powerfully, it sold an estimated 50 million units by 1930.”

The book covers the Paris Expos and Fairs from 1855 to 1937, and Pappas dives into many other inventions and landmarks introduced on this world stage, like Roquefort cheese, the Eiffel Tower and the invention of the suitcase rooted in the designs of a Louis Vuitton trunk.

While world fairs and expos have fallen out of favor in the U.S. — the last one was held in New Orleans in 1984 — Pappas says much of the world still uses them as a form of soft power.

“We in the U.S. view it like we do black and white television, something of the past,” Pappas says. “The rest of the world has seen it as a platform to put themselves on an even higher world stage.”

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