More than one in ten wig-wearers have seen their toupees blow off in the wind
MORE than one in ten wig-wearers have seen their cherished toupees take off.
A hair-raising poll claims four per cent of Britain’s seven million baldies have covered up with a syrup, around 280,000.
And 11 per cent of those — more than 30,000 — admitted it had blown off their bonce in windy weather.
One, Richard Gorman, 42, of Maidstone, Kent, bought himself a £600 wig for his 30th birthday.
"I had just moved house and switched job, so not many people knew me, so I thought I’d take the opportunity to create a new me."
But he recalled: “It wasn’t great in blustery weather.
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"I went to Margate for a walk with some friends and the wind just whipped my wig clean off.
“I ended up chasing it down the beach, but it got blown out to sea and I never saw it again.”
He opted not to buy another, and can go out in gusty conditions with greater confidence, unlike famous rug-wearers including John Travolta.
He said that he now had his hair like former Strictly champ Bill Bailey, long at the back and bald on top.
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Dense Hair Experts, which polled 2,000 bald or balding men, said four in ten have tried various methods of covering up their thinning locks.