I wish I could, but I don’t really know of a specific rule set or methodology. Aside from the approach I talked about in the video before this one, anything else I do because of facial symmetry is kind of what I’d describe as a “gut thing” or something I can’t really explain. I think there’s a CZcams channel called Qoves or something like that, and they go super scientific about things like facial symmetry.
My hair looks better cut with scissors than clippers. For some reason, people who cut men's hair defaults to a clipper compared to when they are cutting women's hair.
Clippers (at least with a guard, driven with the usual “proper” technique) tend to cut hair so uniformly that it has a very specific “fresh haircut” look, which CAN be achieved with scissors but more often scissors will leave a small amount of human error which causes the hair to have slight variations in length and look a little bit more lived in, less like it was JUST cut. When hair grows it doesn’t all grow exactly at the same rate, so an old grown out haircut will have slightly varied lengths from one strand to the next. Clippers tend to cut very uniformly, and if all the hairs are the exact same length they move in the exact same way, we perceive this as the fresh haircut look, and it’s not until a month later when the hairs are varied in length that they move more interestingly. A scissor cut will more often provide this kind of finish on day one. Also because you’re not watching perfect lines become imperfect over a few weeks, you don’t perceive the haircut as growing back as starkly, so it’s generally believed that a scissor cut will have a longer “grow out” period before it falls apart. If a haircut was designed to look good with perfectly uniform lengths then it no longer looks the same after the hair grows a bit and the lengths vary, but a haircut designed to look good with varied lengths will maintain the same vibe for much longer. I think my next video will be about all of this. Thanks for the inspiration 😬
I loved it! Helped a lot to understand things and to improve my hair cutting skills, although I'm not a professional, only an enthusiastic amateur who cuts her own and her boyfriend's hair. I saved it to my tutorial playlist. Thanx!
Hey andrewdoeshair I love your videos you are amazing! Could you do a video on how YOU would style a fringe? It would be amazing to have this kind of tutorial from you. A lot of times I try to style it but instead of look messy it looks flat and wrong.
Comparing these side-by-side helps so much. Cheers!
awesome! could you do a video on hair in regards to facial symmetry? Argiatou
I wish I could, but I don’t really know of a specific rule set or methodology. Aside from the approach I talked about in the video before this one, anything else I do because of facial symmetry is kind of what I’d describe as a “gut thing” or something I can’t really explain. I think there’s a CZcams channel called Qoves or something like that, and they go super scientific about things like facial symmetry.
@@andrewdoeshair thanks !
My hair looks better cut with scissors than clippers. For some reason, people who cut men's hair defaults to a clipper compared to when they are cutting women's hair.
Clippers (at least with a guard, driven with the usual “proper” technique) tend to cut hair so uniformly that it has a very specific “fresh haircut” look, which CAN be achieved with scissors but more often scissors will leave a small amount of human error which causes the hair to have slight variations in length and look a little bit more lived in, less like it was JUST cut. When hair grows it doesn’t all grow exactly at the same rate, so an old grown out haircut will have slightly varied lengths from one strand to the next. Clippers tend to cut very uniformly, and if all the hairs are the exact same length they move in the exact same way, we perceive this as the fresh haircut look, and it’s not until a month later when the hairs are varied in length that they move more interestingly. A scissor cut will more often provide this kind of finish on day one. Also because you’re not watching perfect lines become imperfect over a few weeks, you don’t perceive the haircut as growing back as starkly, so it’s generally believed that a scissor cut will have a longer “grow out” period before it falls apart. If a haircut was designed to look good with perfectly uniform lengths then it no longer looks the same after the hair grows a bit and the lengths vary, but a haircut designed to look good with varied lengths will maintain the same vibe for much longer. I think my next video will be about all of this. Thanks for the inspiration 😬
@@andrewdoeshairhow do you suggest finding/vetting a barber? General tips & advice on this would be hugely appreciated 🙏
I loved it! Helped a lot to understand things and to improve my hair cutting skills, although I'm not a professional, only an enthusiastic amateur who cuts her own and her boyfriend's hair. I saved it to my tutorial playlist. Thanx!
Excellent content 👌🏻👌🏻
Hey andrewdoeshair I love your videos you are amazing! Could you do a video on how YOU would style a fringe? It would be amazing to have this kind of tutorial from you. A lot of times I try to style it but instead of look messy it looks flat and wrong.
I need this guy to cut my hair
Do you still recommend the Babyliss Pro Rapido hair dryer?
What kind of sea salt spray do you recommend?
Your videos are very good and educative
Off topic question. What is your opinion on the Wahl High Visibility trimmer?
Off topic question. Is a Princeton haircut 1.5 inches on top?
Спасибо!
Love these videos. Very informative, keep em comin