Hairpins

A Peranakan woman, also known as Nonya, would traditionally tie her waist-long hair into a coiled bun, which would be held in place with hairpins such as these. This set of six hairpins of varying sizes, studded with pearls and decorated with a floral motif at the top, was used in Penang, where sets of between five to seven hairpins were used. This was in contrast to the common practice of using three pins in Malacca and Singapore. As the bun was worn high near the top of the head and was wound very tightly, older Nonyas face gradual hair loss, receding hairlines, and bald spots. By the 1930s, hairpins were no longer relevant to the younger Nonyas who cut their hair according to the latest Western fashions.