Generally speaking,
I prefer that my clients learn to deal with their natural hair texture. I know yes, that restructuring texture is a HUGE industry that generates billions of dollars annually. I'de rather teach you to manage your texture and rock the hell out of it. This means finding products that can help you downplay frizz, and play up volume and shine. I still love my diffuser, which many have lost touch with since the eighties, although the gallon of mousse it once took to create these crunchy curls is and must stay, a thing of the past.
I would like to say that I play by the rules, but I would be lying if I said that I will never cut a straight across bang on a round face, or cut hair short on a person with a larger build. I know that there are shapes that will flatter my clients features. What I think is most important, is how we FEEL. If you walk out wearing something that makes you feel different, and edgy, and young, then you will project confidence, and sexiness, and therefore be more approachable, and friendly, which is a beautiful thing. The beauty of hair is that it's malleable. We change our hair as we evolve as people. A "mom" persay, never want's "mom" hair. Why "mom" is derogatory in the world of hair I'll never know. A college girl might not want to say to the world "college girl" so she might choose a style older to project "serious, and driven". We can all think about what our current cut and style might "say" about us; and then decide what we'de like it to say.
Friday, April 2, 2010
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