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My dreams have come true, thanks to my talent for wigs

A JFS school trip set a creative schoolgirl on the path to a career in sheitels

March 16, 2023 14:24
Natania Rafael-Friedman
4 min read

Do you know the difference between a sheitel and a wig?

If, like me, you know that sheitel is, in fact, the Yiddish word for wig, you probably think there’s no difference at all. But according to Natania Rafael-Friedman, they’re absolutely not the same thing.

“Traditionally, the hair in a sheitel is machine-sewn onto a fabric cap, and has fairly restricted movement,” she explains, “whereas in the wider wig-making world, for example for TV and film, they are aiming to imitate the natural hairline as much as possible and the hair will be hand-sewn onto a lace cap.”

For Rafael-Friedman, a 35-year-old mother of two little girls, covering her hair with a sheitel after her marriage was never in question.

Her Jewish soul was sparked by a JFS trip to Gateshead in her mid-teens, and her religious observance grew steadily from then on. Following two years of intensive study in a Jerusalem seminary, she met and married her husband Shloime in 2012.

“I knew I wanted to cover my hair and it was —and still is — something that is very meaningful to me,” she says.

“But I was surprised by the effect my sheitel had on me. I felt very suffocated by it, and not at all myself.”

She has a creative spirit — growing up as the only child of a single mother in a one-bedroom flat on a rough council estate in Wembley, she immersed herself in arts and crafts, teaching herself to upholster furniture aged just 14, and turning all her jeans into skirts when she decided to stop wearing trousers for religious reasons.

An interest in hair and beauty was a natural progression, and she spent most of her Year 10 work- experience stint in a pharmacy, not stocking shelves and working on the till as she was meant to, but in the backroom threading the eyebrows of her colleagues.