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Big Eighties hair is back – how to style it without looking retro

  • ontargetmedia8
  • 2 days ago
  • 4 min read

Celebrities are bringing back big bouncy hair on the red carpet – here’s how you can conquer volume at home.


Simone Ashley on the red carpet with big curly hair
Simone Ashley is one of many celebrities bringing back big bouncy hair (Alamy/PA)

You may have seen the Eighties revival seeping its way into fashion with peplum tops and shoulders pads – but the retro resurgence has finally reached our hair.


Big, bouncy, full-bodied hair is everywhere again, thanks to the likes of Sabrina Carpenter, Doja Cat, Simone Ashley and more. But before you panic at the thought of crisp perms and helmet-hard hairspray, it’s worth saying that this new wave of volume is different.


Sabrina Carpenter attends the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards
Sabrina Carpenter has been leading the charge for a big hair revival (Alamy/PA)

“Big hair is back, but it’s had a very modern makeover. The key difference now is softness,” says celebrity hairstylist Jason Collier, founder of Studio23. “You want lift and fullness, but with movement and ‘touchability’, not rigid structure […] your hair should look as though it can move.”


‘Modern’ Eighties hair, in other words, has less lacquer and more lightness.


The haircut does half the work


Volume doesn’t start with products, but in the chair at your hairdresser. Collier says the right cut will build the illusion of fullness before you’ve even picked up a styling tool.


“Ask for long, feathered layers that are placed properly through the crown and around the face to encourage lift,” he explains. “You don’t want heavy, blunt lines because they drag volume down. A really good stylist will create shape that builds body without thinning the hair too much, so it still feels healthy and full.”


Doja Cat attends the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards at UBS Arena on September 07, 2025
Doja Cat channelled 1980s Pamela Anderson on the MTV Video Music Awards red carpet in September (Alamy/PA)

For curly hair, the same principle applies – but precision matters more. Curly hair expert and Curlsmith ambassador Nicola Harrowell explains: “When it comes to curls, the cut is everything.


“Ask your hairdresser for layers that are designed specifically for curly hair […] you want rounded layers that allow curls to spring up and out, not heavy lengths that pull them down.”


And to make this look work, the goal isn’t to force curls into submission. “Big hair doesn’t need to be teased or overly styled to look impactful,” Harrowell says. The 2026 look is softer and far more natural than its Eighties ancestor.


Lightweight shampoo
(Philip Kingsley/PA)

Philip Kingsley Body Building Weightless Shampoo, £28


Lightweight conditioner
(Philip Kingsley/PA)

Philip Kingsley Body Building Weightless Conditioner, £28


Products that create volume and shape without crunch


What distinguishes today’s big hair from retro throwbacks is texture. Collier says the worst mistake is loading hair with heavy creams and traditional stiff sprays.


“Good-looking volume comes from products that support the hair, not coat it,” he says. “Root sprays, light mousses and fine texture mists are perfect because they give lift and grip without stiffness.



“What you want to avoid are heavy waxes, thick creams or old-school hairsprays while styling, because they make hair look crunchy and flat very quickly.”


And if you have more natural movement, you need even more care – but Harrowell says support, not stiffness, should still guide your choices. “A lightweight mousse is ideal because it gives curls lift and hold while keeping them soft and bouncy […] Volume should feel airy, not coated.”


She also dilutes gels with plenty of water for a “juicy texture that isn’t too crunchy.”


Hair foam
(Living Proof/PA)

Living Proof Full Texturizing Foam, £27


Root lifting spray
(Look Fantastic/PA)

Color Wow Raise the Root Thicken + Lift Spray, £18.28 (was £21.50), Look Fantastic


How to blow-dry for max volume


There is one universal pro trick for volume, and that lies in directional drying.


“Drying the roots in the opposite direction to how the hair naturally falls instantly creates lift,” says Collier, “even flipping your head upside down for the first few minutes makes a big difference.”


And while it may feel a bit retro, large rollers remain a stylist secret. Leave them in while the hair cools and you’ll get shape without stiffness.



“When styling long layers, I’d always recommend using a large round brush to inject extra volume and shape the layers,” explains stylist Sophie Chandler from RUSH Hair. “Blow dry the hair back and forth away from the root, lifting the hair to achieve a texturised, voluminous finish!”


Curly hair, meanwhile, does best with gentle diffusing. “Diffusing is your best friend for curly volume,” says Harrowell. “Always dry curls with your head tilted or upside down to encourage lift at the roots, and use low heat with low airflow so you don’t disturb the curl pattern.” A root-lifting product underneath, she says, helps the volume last all day.


Hair rollers
(Hershesons/PA)

Hershesons The Self Grip Rollers, £12


Olplex heat protectant
(Look Fantastic/PA)

Olaplex Volumising Blow Dry Mist, £28, Look Fantastic


Keep the hair healthy or the look collapses


There’s one theme every stylist wants to drive home: health equals volume. Chandler warns that heat styling without protection “strips the hair of its natural moisture, while severely weakening the structure of your hair”.


Her non-negotiable: heat protectant, every single time.



Unhealthy hair can also affect the look of your hair when styling. “Healthy hair always looks fuller, so protection is non-negotiable,” says Collier. “Don’t overdo it day after day.”


Hydration matters for curls, too. Harrowell says balanced moisture means fuller, shinier, more defined curls – even with minimal effort.

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