Sunday, December 18, 2011

Stocking Stuffers for the Beard Lover

Is anyone else totally unprepared for Christmas?  We haven't even started our shopping yet.  If you're like us and wait until the last minute, here's a list of great gifts for the beard-lover in your life.

Moleskine Journal - $12.00 by fricdementol

Grooming the Beard iPhone case - $35.00 from Society6
"Sea Beard" by David Fleck $10 on Threadless
"Handsome Young Bearded Buck" canvas - $40.00 by utilitarianfranchise

Friday, December 2, 2011

How Well Do You Know Your Facial Hair?

Our friend from Matthew Fisher Photography showed us this link and we had to share.  
Take this quiz and let us know how you did!


Thursday, December 1, 2011

Beard of the Month -- December 2011

[via]
Sir James Murray
And you thought we were going to pick Santa, didn't you?
James Murray was the primary editor of the Oxford English Dictionary and worked on it for 36 years until his death.  The full dictionary wasn't complete until thirteen years later, encompassing 12 volumes and containing almost 500,000 words. 
Oh and in case you were wondering how we know this, it's all in an awesome book called The Professor and the Madman. You should read it.


The OED definition of 'beard':
beard, n.
Pronunciation:  /bɪəd/
Forms:  OE–ME beard, (ME bærd, beord, burde), ME–15 berd, (ME–15 berde), ME–15 beerd(e, 15 (Sc. baird, beird), 15–16 bearde, 15– beard.
Etymology:  Common Germanic: Old English beard   ( < earlier *bard  , *bærd  ) = Middle Dutch baert  , Dutch baard  , Old High German, modern German bart  , Old Norse *barðr   retained only in compounds as Langbarðr   (but cognate with barð   neuter, ‘brim, edge, beak, prow,’ whence sense 11 below) < Germanic *bardo-z   (not known in Gothic); cognate with Old Slavonic barda   beard. Kinship to Latin barba   is, on phonetic grounds, doubtful.
1.  The hair that grows upon the chin, lips, and adjacent parts of an adult man's face; now usually excluding the moustache, or hair of the upper lip.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Turkey Beard?

Happy Thanksgiving!
Before you chow down on some turkey, we thought we'd let you in on a little turkey trivia.
Did you know that Turkeys have beards?

"Wild turkey beards grow throughout the life of the bird and usually gain about 4 inches annually. Juvenile males or "Jakes" normally have a beard that is about 2-4 inches in length by their first spring gobbler season. Adult males or "Toms" commonly sport beards that are 8-12 inches in length. The overall length of the beard is regulated by wear as the beard drags the ground."[via]

So the question is, can we live with the fact that we eat our bearded brethren or no?
See that black tuft hanging from this guy? Yup, that's a turkey beard.  Image [via]

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

100th Post!

[via]

We've made it to 100 posts!  That's a lot of beardly goodness to look back on.
Here's to 100 more.
Enjoy your night before Thanksgiving celebrations!

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