Electric Hot Comb

Name/Title

Electric Hot Comb

Entry/Object ID

1000.1801.384

Description

hot comb, electric

Collection

Dave Baer

Made/Created

Manufacturer

Branch

Material

Brass

Color

Black

General Notes

Note

Early-mid 1900s: hot combs evolved from homemade hair-straightening tools to trendy and patented products on the public marketplace. - A combination of heat and the comb’s fine teeth straightened women’s curly or wavy hair texture from root to tip. - Early models were heated using an external source, like a stove top; later hot combs were electrical. - Popularized in America by Black women, who had few hair care products marketed toward them since white people’s hair was considered the default “norm.” Hair and race in America: - For Black American women, tools like hot combs were largely popular because straight hair (and other white, Eurocentric beauty standards) signaled credibility, decency, and worthiness in a culture structured upon white-dominant racial hierarchies. - Pioneering Black women expanded the beauty and hair industries by aiming to meet the needs of Black customers. - Annie Turnbo Malone and Madam C. J. Walker built commercial and educational empires centered on cosmetic and hair care products for Black women.