How To Cut Asymmetrical Graduated Bob Haircut - Short Layered Bob Haircut Tutorial

How to cut Asymmetrical Graduated Bob Haircut

How to Short Layered Bob Haircut Tutorial

Step by Step Layered Bob Haircut Tutorial

*Giving is hold forever*

Hi everyone good morning welcome to head raid life this morning. This is Sally Rochester I, the owner and creator of SR education, and you know we really specialize in head cuts in education and thank you so much to hairbrained for having me on this morning. It'S a very difficult time for all of us and I'm very sorry to all of you that are struggling or I've had to close your salon, we'll get through this together. The thing that we can do is in forums like this. We'Re able to you know at least kind of sustain our education and try and inspire each other and support each other in our head community. So this morning, what I'm gon na do, for you is just a little further creative haircuts and again for those of you. Just joining this is Sally Rogerson from SR education, and what I wanted to do today was just share with you. The concept and the idea of asymmetry. Asymmetry is a very important thing within hair within haircutting bin hair styling, as well, mainly because most people are not perfectly symmetrical in their face, even in their bodies as well. So you know a little bit of asymmetry can actually balance somebody and can actually make them. Look more balanced and just look generally more attractive right in whatever that is for them, but if someone's features are little bit different like for example, if the nose goes one way, then you would always do the fringe the opposite way, so they kind of balance each Other out, what I'm doing is I'm doing more of a creative version of asymmetry. So I'm going to show you my sectioning pattern and show you what I'm up to just putting in a little bit of this graduation first, so you guys can see. So, let's go back to the beginning and let's just talk about how I've set up this heck up. This is a haircut from our creative class, our SR Education, creative class and what I've done is actually sectioned off my doll head into a triangle on the top. So if you look from the front on that triangle, you can see that on one side, it's higher it's just above the parietal Ridge and then on the other side, it's lower and six below the parietal Ridge. So my triangle on the top is off balance. I'Ll show you why what's the reason for that as we go along now, I'd like to share with you have sectioned back, so the back is not sectioned in a center parting. The back is sections diagonally slightly off. So this is the point of the triangle. So the triangle sits under the crown and he's lower on this side and higher on this side. From the point of the triangle, I'm now gon na go in alignment diagonally across, and so I'm splitting the underneath in the back of the head into two parts, but they are not symmetrical. This is more dense, it has more hair. The other side is less dense and has less hair. What I'm doing is a more classic graduated bob technique, I'm using more horizontal diagonal sections to do it. There are not pivoting as many many ways to do. A graduation in the back, and so what I'm doing here is I'm making sure that my sections are starting to mirror the angle of graduation that I would like to achieve. I started in this very bottom. My first section was diagonal. My fingers mirrored my section. My cutting angled mirrored my section everything merits my body position is so that I'm just bringing the head towards me. I'M not gon na walk around into the side. I'M gon na stay here and I'm going to make my body the wall. If that makes sense, I continued my sections brought the head down to the previous section and I'm now going to continue through with that process. Now it's really up to you how you build this weight up. So if you want the weight to sit higher on somebody's head, you would continue to elevate. If you want your weight to sit lower on somebody's head, then you would start to bring that hair down a little bit more. So you know that is your decision making process and that's what makes your haircutting individual and that's what makes it suit your client in the chair. So I think that that's really important to remember. Whenever you're developing any graduation, you want to really think about the profile. The suitability, where do you want that weight to sit for that client? Where do you want it to sit for the occipital bone? If someone has a very prominent occipital bone, then you might decide to go higher. You might even decide to go with more of a layer if they're very prominent, because graduation builds weight so be aware of that and realize that your graduation has to sit on the profile where you want it to be so, you'd be thinking about the clients, nose. Occipital bone jawline, all of that good stuff, as I'm doing my graduation and the hair around and making it sit, how I want it to so. Thank you all for joining hope. You are enjoying the experience. I'M sorry we're together in such hard times. For those of you that I don't know, this is Sally Rogerson from SR education, I'm doing a little bit of an asymmetric haircut for you today, and this is just the graduation parts, I'm building my graduation in the back. As you can see, I have been elevating to the previous section, but now I'm actually bringing the hair down to a base. So my weight line here is sitting below the occipital bone, but you could continue to elevate and do this much higher. So this is completely up to you. You'Ve got to realize that a lot of creativity and creative haircuts are your interpretation for ugliness our education. We try and teach you the techniques and understand how you're doing something, and why are you doing something, and then you can go off and let your imagination run wild. So my combing is very important as well. I would like to talk about your non-dominant hand. My dominant hand, I'm right-handed my dominant hand, is doing a lot of work. He'S combing he's controlling a lot of stuff. However, my non-dominant hand, my left hand in my case, has to do some work. So if my non-dominant hand this one, if it's a bit lazy - and it's not really doing anything - then you'll find that your graduation will ended up getting to look. So, if that happens to you in the salon, it means your non-dominant hand isn't doing any work. This hand has to come up has to work. It has to come up to where I'm gon na cut it. This hand brings the head down at the same time and where they meet is where you're deciding to cut the hair and you're deciding to cut the hair at the elevation, depending on where you want to build your graduation simple as that. So if you find that your graduation is always a bit heavy, it means your non-dominant hand has gone to sleep and it's not doing any work. So you need to wake it up and figure out what it's up to I'm in the crowd. So I'm using a slightly larger end of my foam, so I'm gon na move on to this comb. Now these are our wires pop s, our education combs, I'm going into my larger teeth now, because I'm in the crown, I don't want to make it as tight on the tension, but I haven't done my outline yet this is all just my interior work. Now I'll go all the way through, my sides are being over directed back and they're coming all the way back to the mastoid process in the back. I'M not pulling they're super super tight over here, because, even though my lady doesn't have as many swirls in the salon, this area is the danger zone. So you need to go into your larger teeth. Comb loosen your tension. You can go back in and work that after the blow dry so right now, I'm just putting my raw shape in so right now. This is my heavy side. I'M gon na go into my light side now, if you're just joining us I'll, just do a quick overview of what we're doing so good morning again, everyone we are in our living room, so live from our living room. Okay, I'm sure you guys are too so we wanted to share this little fun creative technique with you. So this is from SR Education, creative program, and it's really about the concept of trying to you know create some asymmetry within a haircut. So I have a large triangle in the top. My triangle is higher and above the parietal Ridge on this side, and you can do it the opposite side as well, and then on my other side, you can see that it's below the parietal Ridge and he's lower. So I have a trial on my triangle in the back area, is asymmetric and goes off to the side, and I've now split the back here in alignment with the triangle. So simple, as that, this side is heavy an has more weight and density. This side is lighter and has less density, so we are now going to move into the light side overall, gon na end up with a balance that is not usually balanced and correct. It'S going to be a little bit off balance and therefore asymmetric. So I'm now going through into my lighter side. My lighter side is very important because you have to exaggerate your angle because I'm working more horizontal, graduation based you have to do almost like an arc with your fingers. I'Ll show you what that looks like we're. Looking to do this, not that that kind of inverted bob ends up looking very lumpy and heavy there and it looks like 1984 and we don't want that. We want to have it a bit more gentle and a bit more soft. So it's all about your finger angle. If you cut it all in one piece off, then it's gone. If I use this as my guide in the middle, but then I start to cut with the tips of my scissors, I can now very slowly move my palms around, so that gives me a little bit more hair here now. If I cut it in one go - and I don't have any scissor control, then, is gone if I cut it in smaller pieces with my tips of my scissors, it's gon na be better. My guide is from here, so I know what my elevation is. If I bring it down to low, it won't work, so my elevation is from my other side and I'm slowly cutting and moving my palm so that I can develop a little bit of length here, but I'm connecting in the middle. So this is really scissor control and just moving slower again, my non-dominant hand is doing some work. My non-dominant hand is lifting up my comb and my scissor, my dominant hand, is coming down and where they meet. That is where I'm going to cut. So if you come to my classes, I talk a lot about lining up, so I'm lining up to my guide line. If I was in the wrong body position, I would be over here and it wouldn't line up. So I'm looking for that crisp guide. If I'm too high my guides messy, if I'm too low my guides messy, I need to literally find my correct elevation and guide and that's when it's crisp working the hair to go along. I do normally work on live models, but obviously because of the situation we are working on a doll head. I found this beautiful plant at Tara products. I only use their doll heads in my classes and my events, so I 100 % recommend it. If any of you are looking to do some education at home, if you are home bound like we are, so we are based in Scottsdale for those of you that don't know us. Unfortunately, we do have an Academy at the moment we're about to start cosmetology, but due to obviously the situation, we're not able to open right now, but we are open, live in our living room and that's what we're going to be doing every single day. We are going to be live and that's over on SR society. We have a private Facebook groups are starting Sunday. We'Re gon na, have myself all of my SR amazing educators, friends of SR education and also friends of our. We also have a hash of of thrive sessions, so we're gon na be live on our Facebook group every single morning, 9:30 we're gon na be doing hair, cutting coloring extensions, yoga, meditation, wellness, barbering everything, really business consultations. So if you want to join us, then please do. We would love to see you in that s, our society group and we are only charging a lifetime fee of $ 25 to join. You can look at anything and everything you want to for as long as you want. So, as you can see now, I've known Lee finished my graduation. So it's a bit like a graduated Bob, that's slipped! So if you think about it, it's a bit like you've, put hats on and then tilting it and put it at a little angle. So that's what it's looking like right now. Obviously, I'm going to go into the outline work as well, but I'm also going to put in a bi-level technique in the sides. Okay, so I don't care about the outline right now, I'm just looking at my graduation and visually. I can see if I'm getting that arc or that curve, and that's what I'm looking for. I like it a bit heavier. As I said you could be doing it higher with your graduation hundred percent. This will be dusted out a bit more in the end results as well, so we're gon na go around to the heavy side. Now, when you do a symmetry, if you have too much weight on one side, you will often feel like it looks like the lead. Singer of the Human League, if any of you know who that is surely some people, my age on that for all you, young people go look up the Human League, the least thing I had a very, very obvious asymmetry and, even though it looked absolutely cool as Heck then now it looks a little bit dated so to me, when I do a symmetry I like to be able to move the hair around so that it looks different, different ways. However, you wear it, so it's not just gon na have the weights on one side. What I'm gon na do here is I'm gon na go back through in the underneath of the heavy side. Generally, when you have a lot of weight like this, it can sit very heavy into the neck. It converts it very heavy on a collar or if it's longer, on a garment. So I like to take some hair up from the underneath to create some space. So the long hair can fall over and swing and move and not get stuck. So I'm not going to go through on my heavy side and take some plastic wrap. Graduation sections diagonal, I'm gon na actually go the opposite direction. If you prefer, you can do this in the comb as well, so you can either make it more clean, edged like this, or you can also do it through your fingers. Whatever you want to do so, I'm gon na put in diagonal sections like a round graduation technique, but I'm going to just very gently through my comb: go the opposite way with the cutting the reason that the sections and the cutting angle don't match is, if you Do a diagonal section that way, but you cut that way. The very front of the section has more weight in it which it needs to lay down and keep that hair laying down and now so. This is my third section: I'm now going to go all the way through into the back as well. Leyton head forward its natural position, feeding through my scissor of my comb, feeding the hair through again I'll deal with this afterwards, I'm not going up to the top of the section I'm going below it, and what you're gon na find is a diagonal section like this. Basically gives you that little underneath cool by level, but then the hair from the top can still lay over it. So it'll still have something to cover, so they can choose to tuck it behind the ear and show it or they can choose to have more coverage. So it's a case of giving clients something a little bit different, that they can show or not show. This bi-level technique as well is extremely wonderful for clients that have previously shaved the underneath of their hair and it's growing out. So I'm now going to go to the back of using my guide from this short piece here and then I'm also just gon na cut in a little bit of hair in this nape area. Again, the reason for that is to allow that other hair to fall over and be able to swing around and not just get stuck into the nape. Okay, I'm very chatty this morning. Thank you for joining us. If you have any questions like to ask me, then please do so. That'S my heavy side down you can see. Underneath you can see, that's falling over. The top outlines are not done yet in the back now we're gon na go into the other side and do that how's everyone doing. Are we doing okay this morning? If you have any questions for me, then please ask away I'm very happy to answer anything and thank you all for joining us this morning. Okay, so now I'm gon na go into my smaller side. I'M gon na comb the head down and then I'm going to push it and see: where does it want to break now? If you had a real ear, it would be even more important to see where the hair wanted to sit, rather than just forcing it. If I just do that, I'm not taking into consideration where the EO wants to naturally break so I'm gon na look at where the head wants to break and if you had a real yeah like I said that would show you where it wanted to split. So now I'm gon na go through and on this side I'm gon na cut my short piece in, but from the top I'm not gon na hide it underneath because there's less hair to cut in the first place so that one has it coming down from the Full area, and still has that bi-level feeling again I'll deal with the finishing afterwards. This is Emily from hair up. She is naturally like a light blonde. I have lightened her this morning in the kitchen she got a kitchen hair color. I used some formulary teen on there as well, but it's a really good dog head to color. If you are planning on doing any kind of color education at home yourself, sorry about the noise okay, so here we go. We are now going to go into top area, so I'm going to comb this hair over the top into and across the short side, alright, and how I'm going to connect this in is by going through with diagonals, horizontal diagonal sections, and then I'm going to use. My guide from here so you'll see when I comb this down. I have a guide there very gently in my hands and with a large tooth comb very loose. I'M just going to start up. I'M gon na connect there, but then I'm gon na start a new guide which will lay over the top of the underneath hair. So what I'm doing now is coming through I'll have to turn to get a bit of tension there. So I'm coming through and this hair is a new guide line from the back and it's sitting over the top of the underneath head so coming through and again is starting to follow my new guide, I'm just making this up. It'S really a case of how long you want the other side to be so we're just gon na keep going continue through. So you can see on this side. I have a new guide and it's falling over the top of the underneath guide, so very simply continuing through again, I'm not dragging the hair back, I'm just very gently guiding it into this back area. I'M on purpose, doing a bit more of a heavier weight line, but you do not have to on this technique. It'S really fun to do this, a little longer, it's fun to do it super short as well. So there's a million ways you can use this, I'm just into heavy lower, weighty shapes right now, but you know when I'm cutting this in a month's time, I might be doing something different on the weight. Okay, so here we go. We'Ve now got a longer area on this side, so the idea of this is eventually in a weird kind of way, starts to kind of balance out and not be just all one side obvious and then once I go into this outline, then you'll see that it Comes together, I'm not necessarily a hair cutter that always wants to make it look crazy. You know I'm very into using my technique, I'm very into using my creative techniques to actually work on someone to still be attractive and to still be suitable, and I think that that's what you have to think up. You know if you're working in your regular shower with your clients, you know some people will let you go asymmetric, but they still want to take into consideration their head shape. They still want to take in suitability all of that good stuff. Okay, so bear with me a second I'm gon na blow dry, I'm gon na try and get it down as fast as possible, so I'm gon na turn up the noise. Before I do that this is like I would just drink this. This is like everything to me: formula 18, styling cream best thing in the whole wide world on clients on doll, heads doesn't matter who it is. I can get it out of the bottle. Okay, so it's just a really nice cream. Don'T need so much. I'Ve pretty put about that much in as well. I'M just going to apply this with my hands and I always always always call me through super important Ruthie says she loves Emily with those lashes. Oh yes, Emily she's, a lovely lady, she's, very nice to work on. I have to say - and you know lashes yes, the lash is on there. So I'm going to come this through. This is a really good technique to like finger wave and stuff, if you really into that vibe at the moment, but always code whatever it is. You'Ve put in the hair through before you blow-dry and almost like, set it. So I'm going to come it through really nice and clean and tight and make it sit. How I want it to so that when I blow-dry it, the finish will be great and I've done a lot of the work already, because I'm making that cuticle sit down and I'm making it behave and it's almost like a wet set. You want to work that hair, make it sit, how you want it to and then I'm going to just use like a wrap drying technique flat brush I'll. Do it as quick as I can just talk amongst yourselves for a moment, just gon na put a little bit the leave-in conditioner if I've got if I'm working in the shorter hairline, I often just work with my comb in the hairline to make the head behave. Village elder a team right Georgian alderman chabot Kim Davis's. Thank you conspiring me. While I'm at home in New Jersey Barton, says I love the European shapes from cupboard, shapes mrs. pang, keeping inspiration, love. You were into my eye, but he says I love the idea of using a comb to style the main area and it says it's made and finished and it already looks beautiful. Oh, thank you so much come see the name, but last name Adams, beautiful without even using of us. This actually looks really great on curly, hair and waving there as well, so can be used on any texture and the super drag. Naturally, I like to dry. This is one get back to normal, we'll see you in class a lot of people frenzy I'll, be nothing on everyone still trying to get them to shed their beautiful ideas with you, and it will really cover everything we'll be doing makeup business extensions bothering head-butting, obviously, Is our team, and also special guests david, says, definitely doing this as soon as i get back to work this haircut so Jerry Taylor says love this. What kind of brush is that this is a best brush. It'S our s, our education best brush. It'S kind of to me the modern Denman. It has a little bit more of a curve to it. We have a really great online store. We sell these brushes, we sell Y as well branded s our education phones. We also have our new want to stuff that, so, if you're in the brush we can send out in the mail can't see the name with someone saying geometry class is in session, that's a great cop right on out tomato green is watching so guys. I would know we spend 10 minutes just making that bit cleaner on the blow-dry, but the time and also for noise, I'm actually just going to get my iron in instead just honor on a low heat, and then we can stay connected to each other. I can make it work, of course, good. Ah ha ha ha here we go we're on so another thing about ironing, I'm using my friends at hair arts and beautiful iron, which I'm really mad about, and they actually commissioned me to do a wig shoot. So that's mad good matter. What what this is you bad about Mad good? Oh, my good yeah yeah um, so I actually use this on a wig shoot and then I just start using it for everything. It'S really great, but uh, just a little tip about ironing. When you're ironing, particularly a creative haircut or even any kind of shorter hair Cup, I always iron with diagonal sections from the front to the back, even with Barb's. Actually, I'm lying. I do it with everything, even with long hair doesn't matter. The reason I use diagonal sections is that it stops you getting as many horizontal marks from the iron number one and not two. When you work diagonally from the front to the back, you are able to get into this lower shorter hair at the bottom. So it means that I can get in, and I and this where, as if I was going in more horizontally from the bottom, it would be harder to get my iron in so also. I just want to mention something else about ironing, and that is the heat. Is just this right hand is just giving me the heat my left hand with the comb is doing all of the work. What I'm doing is I'm trying to observe how the hair moves like at the end? Does it kink this way or this way, how do I want it to lay at the end, so I'm going to put my heat in, but then it's this comb here so at the end, I can either flick it this way or I can flick it back. The other way, that's what it needs or I can bring it down lower or I can lift it higher if I want more volume. So it's my left hand again. That is doing a lot of work through here when the back of this iron gets hot as well, sometimes I'll iron, it with the back of the iron, but obviously heat wise on your plan, be very careful with that. Okay, I'll move a bit faster and then we can get on to a outline and our haircut Dinah says hi. Sorry sonnet is much gratitude and thanks and so education, that's elevating my life. Oh Thank You Diana, I hope you're doing alright. I don't know if the Cylons are open down there or not, but I know a lot of them up here and starts. They were closed. Unfortunately, our school is closed as well, but we are hoping to open depending on the situation. Obviously, we are opening to start a new kind of cosmetology course hopefully made dependent, so here in Arizona, an annoying quite a few states. Now there is a thousand, our just hair only license and that's what we are going to be opening our Academy with so people who want to just do hair, not the nails and the skin can come to our Academy, some thousand hours. So if you know anyone in Arizona that's interested in hair school, I'm gon na be in there teaching them. Alongside my SR education team as well it'll, be a very different experience than regular hair school. We are going to teach everyone how to film how to edit how to get there YouTube, how to get there social media up and that's the first thing that they learn to me. Those are the skills you're gon na need for being a future hair stylist. These only six months, so six months course and if they can do 200 hours at home online doing this stuff with me, so pretty great opportunity. You know. Obviously you can do two hours owner as well, if you're thinking about, if you know anyone who's thinking about doing hair school gon na, be super cool and you're gon na learn how to cut color. Do business green circle everything right styling deal with me, that's the fun bit. I am the kind of person that will give people everything. I'Ve got no holding back so you're in my team, full life and I'll always look after my graduates and help them in any way shape or form. I can okay, okay, it's done get in there. Folks, thanks for holding on through the boring stages right. Okay, I need to lower it a little bit and then we will get that okay, so the back area looks pretty heavy right now in the east, let's think about heavy on purpose, just because I like weightier shapes in graduation at the moment, but I'm gon na Dust it and I'm gon na do my outfits, okay, so the first thing I'm gon na do is start to put my outline in now outlines are very, very individual right. Some people, like soft, outlines some people like to write their name in the back whatever it is. That is your thing and he's right for your client. That'S the most important thing: it's not just about what you want to do it's about. What does the client need on their neck to me, because I've got a lot of things going on already. I don't particularly want, like too many other things going on, but that's completely your style. So I'm going to use my guide from my kind of higher points through here I mean I could do like a full arc all the way across there. I could also put in a little bit more of a B. Let'S just see what happens, how about that. So, to start with, I'm just gon na get a bit of weight off now, whenever you put an outline in like this you're really just using the tips of your scissors and also I'm resting on my finger on this side and I'm resting my knuckle on the Client, so my fingers and again my non-dominant hand, is doing all the work. I'M just cut in half at this one, so I'm pushing my scissor around and that's how I'm getting a curve. Also, once you put a line in there, you have stands off the neck and it has almost a corner in there. So I want to go back in. If you can do it through your fingers, then you can graduate it, but if you need to just go through a large tooth cone that just takes the edge off the corner, you can see how it's sitting in a bit better. Now I only see the rubber cone when I can't get it in my fingers, so then on to my other side again totally up to you. What you want to do think for now I'll, just put in a little bit of a shape, see design wise. What I want to do, because I know I want to take this side up a little bit more son. Rosella says good haircut looks Oh hope you guys are doing all right over there. Thank you for joining us. Karen says Scotland, loving, the cut type Erin from Scotland, hope you're all doing. Okay today, I know we're in uncertain territory. You just have to try and stay strong, and I don't know get through this right into my outlines again. If you want to, you can slice it. If that's your thing, that's what you like to do, obviously not mine, maybe another day, but today, I'm feeling very just strong came through my cone on purpose just to give it a little bit of a softer edge. You know my background is a former Sassoon educator and creative director for many many years. So I do have that Sassoon technique in me, but I also sometimes just like to keep things a little bit looser as well. So really it's just whatever you feel like and whatever suitable for that client. Okay, we're coming through into my other side! Now, no, I'm not we're gon na finish off my dusting. So let's talk about dusting, I'm gon na go through the large teeth of my comb. That'S really important because I want loose tension. I'M gon na work in my hands now and it's almost gon na feel a little bit like a scissor of commotion as in smooth, but I'm going to be dusting the head. So what that basically means is I'm gon na take the same sections, I'm using my thumb again, this hand is doing all the work folks, okay, everyone's thinks this hand doesn't do anything, but this is actually holding the whole thing together. This hand holds my comb on my scissors and then I'm just gon na go to the very ends of the hair and I'm going to lift and dust at the same time. So I'm gon na lift and dust as I go up. Some of you might prefer to point, and that's totally, okay, whatever you like to do, I'm not somebody who says this is right. This is wrong. I think honestly, in my mind, all hair cutting is good. You can use whatever tools you want. You can use whatever scissors you want as long as you are doing it to the best of your abilities and you're doing a good job. That'S all the matters to me and s, our education. We use a razor, we use scissors. We do everything. Donor says a great tip. Thank you, great tips. Thank you. Thank you, love it Martha says thank you for sharing your amazing talent, hello from Montreal, Canada, hello. I think it's ballast ballast good job. Thank you so just Dustin deciding how much you want to take off and then really you've got to start to look at the balance in the front and start to decide cherry. Do you want to keep on each side again? If you can't have to do some pointing in that weight area - and that's fine as well just go even stuff on the ends a little bit, some people prefer to do it in their cone. That'S okay as well! It'S all good! As long as it's not just random madness and just picking up a hair and hacking it as long as you have a plan as long as it makes sense to you, then that's the most important thing gon na go to my other side. I usually do a kind of slightly shorter haircut, but I thought what else are we doing right? We might as well go the whole hog this morning. So thank you for staying with us if you're watching afterwards. I appreciate that too. This is Sally righteously, my company's SR education. We work in all forms of education, cutting coloring. I also own a hair show which is called thrive sessions, so we'll definitely be putting on another one after all of this has calmed down. So look out for that, if you want to join us as well, I'm lifting and dusting remember. I have a new guideline on this side, so be careful, don't think to yourself like when I get to there and see my guide under there don't be like. Oh must cut that right. That'S my new guide that I used on my top, so I'm lifting this up now and dusting and that's giving me a slightly softer feeling. Somebody says beautiful. Casey says this has been such a nice educational distraction. Oh think, thinking about joining the 8th, the Facebook group - oh yeah, please do $ 25. You know I wish I could do it for free, but we just have to cover some doll, heads admin, stuff, and you know it's a great investment we're going to have so many different classes. So many different things going on in there and it's gon na be on every day, seven days a week and we'd love to have you that is a great community in there as well. There'S a lot of our educators can ask people questions about stuff services, love thrive sessions. We have so much fun being a part of your show. Oh thank you. Alana says I really like your encouragement of creativity in the way you educate it's nice to hear. There'S always more than one way sorry yeah. I can't see the rest of the comment. Okay. Well. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. So, let's just do a bit of styling just for fun yeah we had. We had a really great first thrive sessions of the year. It was actually here in Phoenix in Arizona in January, and it was just wonderful. We had an amazing new sponsor that we absolutely loved, and that is a an amazing new to the u.s. color company and they're called professional by fam'ly from Italy. So if any of you are on here, we love you and we're thinking of you right now, but one of the most amazing had color lines I've ever used, so thank you to Farmer will definitely be using that in our school as well. But wait maybe we'll be using it in our Facebook classroom as well. Right do some techniques. Okay. So what I want to share with you is you can make it look a lot of different ways. I'M just using a bit of formula 18 has Bray right now. So I can come through here and start to style it a bit more across, so it looks a certain way. I have these nice cool pieces falling down and I've got shorter, have underneath showing as well so that looks really cool too. You can see it works. Many many different ways and it works really really good as well, if you're into doing a bit of styling as well, it really kind of works, super cool with a little bit of it up to anyway, services. Thank you for the shout out. We all love you here at professional by Obama - oh hi. Sarah, yes, can't wait to use more of the line, they're really having fun with it too. Hey Kim Kim's gon na do a demo on you came on on our Facebook group. I hope okay. So, let's just read: look at this and do a recap pointing so when I'm pointing I'm going in with more of a vertical scissor. If you go in on more of an angle, then you're gon na take a lot more weight out. So it's up to you. If you want to take more weight up and go on bit stronger, we're gon na go in more vertical and then I'm just looking at my weight line here. It'S just a little bit heavy for me as well. Just gently take that out and using my eyes I mean honestly guys I can't see anything. I don't have a mirror situation, so I'm just using my eyes, but if I was in the salon, then obviously I would try and okay. This is shine spray plus again Hungary, teens and they're cool already light. Now, if you do want to get like a little bit more of a texture in there, then it's just the case of going in using your hands a little bit more and kind of rubbing. The hair, so that's really a good way to kind of texturize the ends. Obviously you can use products as well, but because I like to mess around with it a bit, I don't like to put a heavy wax in there. I like to just use my hands. Just to finish, all I'm doing is I'm rubbing the hair, so I'm kind of scrunching it and rubbing the hair like that, and that's really how I get a different texture. So, just imagine that you are doing a shoot for Vogue in the Bahamas on the beach and your photographer wants texture. Just gon na go and get a bit of water from the sea spray it on and do this you'll get texture, but then, when they turn around and say well it's straight now you can just comb it through with your fingers and it'll still calm down. So not coming into anything, that's too aggressive product wise. Otherwise you can't get rid of it. Okay, so Jeremy's son, he said it's beautiful workers, always keeping us entertained. The small Thank You Jeremy. I hope you're doing. Okay. That'S me: Perry spot chin, hi, Leslie, PPA Leslie. I hope you're doing good you just around the corner from me, so here we go. This is my finished look. So thank you all so much for joining us from the living room, I of X, our education. I hope you all keep it well. I know this is a really difficult time for us all right now and you know for us: it's really just about trying to keep you inspired. We can use this time for education and, to you know, really sharpen our skills, so I'm Sally Watterson for harebrained. As thank you very much herring for letting me on here this morning. I hope you enjoyed a technique. Please join us every single day, starting on Sunday morning at 9:30, we're going to be going live with all sorts of different things to try and keep you all your spirits up, and that is in our Facebook group is called SR Society. It'S only $ 25 and we hope you stay safe and well and thank you very, very much. Bye.

Thoehn: OMG, THANK YOU! You're absolutely beautiful in your explanation. I've been looking for guidance since the pandemic started. I'm a bit of an elder goth and have had a side shave for a long time, so asymmetrical is my go-to cut. My occipital bone is rather large, however and I have a chubby face, so making more volume from the top of my cut is a must. You are the first person to even mention the occipital bone that I have found on youtube. It all makes sense now! Thank you! <3 Much love! Stay safe and prosperous!

Karen Hernandez: Hola!!! No entiendo perfectamente el idioma inglés. Sin embargo es muy fácil de digerir la técnica de corte. Me encantó. Felicidades!!!

MARTHA CHAVEZ: I loved it! I am going to do that haircut

Elizabeth Sprinz: Thank you for your excellent details in explaining and sharing some new advice as to the way to even think of this haircut approach.

Hakan Gonzaga: Thank u

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