-
Website
http://artofmanliness.com -
Original page
http://artofmanliness.com/2008/05/20/rediscovering-the-barbershop/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Marisa Duma
2 comments · 2 points
-
vanderleun
2 comments · 137 points
-
Alison_H
4 comments · 1 points
-
Corey
15 comments · 2 points
-
jurisnaturalist
3 comments · 23 points
-
-
Popular Threads
i too have had this experience of venturing for people to cut my hair and winding up with a crappy cut. Im 28 and cheap when it comes to haircuts. i used to grow up on a reservation where either your mom did it or you walked the mile down the road to the older gentleman that cut your hair for 5 bucks.
So even up to about a year ago i was trying to find someone that would cut it the way i want. i had gone to this barbershop where i had it cut by a nice guy but honestly paying 20 bucks for a haircut seemed outrageous. but honestly it was one of the best cuts i had in so many years.
so now i am using my friends wife as my hair cutter. honestly she is pretty good but i can see going to a barber and paying the extra cash, there is something about getting it done by a guy that takes pride in giving haircuts.
on another note, i always wanted to try a wet shave but haven't yet. my facial hair doesn't grow to fast, not like my hair on my head. i shave like maybe 3 times a week. but i do use a 40's safety razor, since i have sensitive skin and cant stand the plastic razors.
if you don't use a safety razor you should give it a try sometime.
The next time I go in I'll definitely be requesting a shave with my haircut!
I would say it is the other way around. Real barbers use scissors and blades.
Other than that, I totally agree. Wonderful article, as is this entire weblog.
http://layrite.com/
On a side note, if you are looking for a great pomade that washes out and smells awesome, do yourself a favor and pick up some of his. You can thank me later.
It's true about the father and son thing. I look forward to going with my son. He happily follows me now that I don't make any choices about how his cut should be.
Funny that Daniel mentioned Indian barbers. Almost every barber shop in Malaysia is run by Indians and we regularly get the kind of stuff that he wrote about.
Regards
I have not experienced the small town traveling barber before, since that was during an earlier time. I hear those barbers set up shop under a tree, and there are other hawkers nearby who will sell nice ice-cold treats (nice in the humid/hot Malaysian climate). I wish I was older to experience that, having a manly hair cut in the great outdoors :)
I tried to find a quality barber shop in my new town, but have not been able to. I don't know if it's because they're not out there or I'm not looking hard enough.
BTW, my barber uses clippers AND scissors.
When I'm retired, I look forward to the luxury of a real barbershop. Unfortunately, because of their hours, I'm stuck with CostCutters.
I must say that the 'feel' of the barbershop for me, is more pronounced in the small towns. In the big city, the barbers don't remember you and the conversation is weak at best. Supercuts, with its loud techno music and robotic-armyesque buzzers is everything my local barber was not. Long live local barbershops and bazooka gum.
Keep up the great work!
One thing I´ve been foolish not to consider is to have a shave there as well. I am going to try it this Saturday!
Many blessings,
Art Gonzalez
Check my Squidoo Lens at: Quantum Knights
I disagree about the main tool being clippers. I'll take a person with a comb and scissors any day. Barbers who only use clippers don't have a clue what they are doing in my opinion.
“'A barber is trained to cut with clippers, the main tool in cutting a man’s hair. Cosmetologists, on the other hand, are trained to use scissors”'
"I would say it is the other way around. Real barbers use scissors and blades."
Well that's what all the barbers told me. Of course they use scissors too. But the point is that a lot guy's hair needs the clippers, and cosmetologists aren't good at using them. Cosmetologists never ever use clippers, unless they are cutting a woman's hair super super short.
@Bryan-Could you go on your lunch break? A shave and a haircut would make for a relaxing hour.
@Johnathan-Yeah barbers may not be for absolutely everyone. They cut hair in a pretty straightforward way, so if your hair is unique likes yours, I can see there might be a problem.
Recently I went to the salon my wife uses. Not only was the shampooing fantastic, they knew how to cut my hair. They used all sorts of gadgets I had never seen at the barber to make my hair lay properly (curls don't like to cooperate when they are short).
I have to agree with the shave though. I miss that dearly. I also miss them using the straight razor to clean up the back of my neck after the hair cut. It gave a crisp, clean look to the neck line and felt like a million bucks.
For me, tradition plays a huge roll in where I go. The place where I got my first haircut? They also gave all three of my boys their first haircuts as well. My wife laughs, but this is something my sons can pass on to their sons.
I have a short write up about my barbershop as well as video of son #3's first haircut, if you're so inclined. http://www.minnesota-vacation-guide.com/beauty-...
Thanks for reminding my why I have my hair cut where I do.
I was just about to write a story about barbershops, but you beat me to it. That's okay... your article makes for a great read.
Growing up, I used to go to the neighborhood barbershop with my father and brother every month. It was a stately shop, with hardwood floors, nicely upholstered chairs, and the smell of pipe tobacco. And it was run by two Italian oldtimers, with whom my father would converse about politics here in the U.S. and back in the old country.
When my parents moved to a different state, there wasn't a barbershop to be found nearby. Consequently, we started going to SuperCuts... or my mother would cut my hair with a razor kit she bought... at Sears. (Gotta hand it to mom, though. She didn't do too bad a job.)
Fast-forward past college and grad school.... I moved back to NYC and found a great little neighborhood barbershop, also run by a few old Italian men. I love going there every 3 weeks or so... getting a nice hair cut (with clippers and scissors)... and even an occasional shave. The conversation is great, whether I speak with the barbers in Italian or with the customers in English. And they know how to cut hair -- in 5 years, I've never walked out with a bad haircut.
I definitely want to create these kinds of memories for my boys.
http://316barberspa.com/
Highly recommend Mike's Barbershop in Princeton where my son and I go. More of a 21st Century experience w/LCD TV's at every station, and enough memorabilia to make a sports bar jealous. But my son and I love the staff there and the free donuts....
I remember as a kid going to the Barbershop, and the thing that sticks with me the most is that's where I first discovered comic books....and the rest was history...
they usually send me out looking something like a muppet. So since i like my hair short on the sides and long enough to gel ontop i head over to the baber shop at the exchange for my 6.25 hair cut every two weeks and just look sharp.
Another factor not mentioned in this article is that different races/ethnicities have different hair textures. my hair is thick and full so i need someone who knows how to cut that kind of hair. usually i try to pick a black or phillipino barber because honestly they give the best hair cuts.
The first place I went some was mass produced 'supercuts' lookalike that cut my hair so badly I looked like a freaking meth addict for a week. It stuck up like crazy no matter what I did to it.
The second place I went was another local barber, nice place, nice guy, cut my hair fine. Not great, but it wasn't bad either.
I returned to my normal one as soon as possible. He knows just how to cut my hair and always makes good small talk while it happens.
This is where you fail.
Real men can write articles by themselves. "Hey honey, let's blog together!" Give me a break.
Also the shave you described sounded like you had some metro sexual shaving you rather than a classic barber. "Cleaning my pores" are you kidding me?
Manliness is dying even where it claims to be being revived, I think I need to go watch Dollars' Trilogy to clear my head.
She said, " you know coloring will work wonders with hair."
If you in the Las Vegas area , visit GERARDO'S CLASSIC BARBER SHOP on W, Spring Mountain @ Chinatown area & Alex's Barber Shop on Sunset right next to the airport. They are the REAL deal on barber shops in Vegas.
If you work for the governmetn or work in some cubicle and never deal with people getting a bad haircut is fine.
But for must of us who have to deal with people we need to look acceptable so just pay the $35 for a good hair styling at a salon.
I've never had a guy use a straight razor on my beard, but I have had plenty of experiences where a real barber would whip out the straight razor to trim up the hair on the back of your neck. Once I had the experience of having the razor to my neck by a guy who was an Iraqi and me mentioning that I was in the Army during the first Gulf war. This was post Gulf war I and pre Iraqi invasion. He was all for the invasion. His family back in Iraq was middle class and was looking forward to liberation. At that time, we both agreed that there was a good chance that Iraq could emerge as a stable democracy....Well, that was then and this is now. Still, it was awkward having that blade to my throat. I was definitely uneasy. I walked out of his shop with a free knock off bottle off bottle of Michael Jordan cologne as a Christmas gift from his family to mine. I graciously gave him a very large tip.
When I was a kid I used to get my hair cut by a guy named Bruce Whited in my hometown of Piqua, Ohio. Bruce used to be a speedboat racer and there were pictures from his glory days around the shop. There were also a racy photo entitled "A barber's dream" of a woman with long hair (and nothing else) covering all the naughty bits and a barber about to go to town with his scissors. To top it off, there was a beer mug shaped like a teat. This was pretty heady stuff for rural Ohio, especially when you roll in the sports on the TV set and the banter between the customers. I still get a haircut from Bruce from time to time when I'm in town. I'm not sure if he's still cutting hair though, it's been over a year since I saw him.
There's a nice little barber shop in downtown DeWitt, Michigan that is mostly a male hangout, although there is one girl who cuts hair there. The place is always packed, so I found another place to get my hair cut. You see, there's this little known unisex shop run by a guy named Frank Antony in Lansing. Frank is Italian and mostly retired. He only cuts hair on Wednesday and Saturday mornings. He's given me the best haircut I've had in years and it's a pleasure talking to the guy. I do, however, wish there was an all male hangout that had lots of customers -- but not too many -- and had the right feel to it.
I would, however, disagree with the slam against female stylists. Occasionally it is nice to get your haircut by a really hot female. It's a bit sensual.
And for those of you who haven't had a straight razor cut, do yourself a favor and do it. I bought a straight razor a few months back and use it every weekend (it takes too long to shave that way during the work week). It's a real pleasure. You learn to do it right pretty quickly, that whole pain aversion thing is wired deep!
Its scissors and a straight blade.
His dad's barbershop in a small town in Sicily didnt have electricity and neither did his graet-grandfather. Old school means no eletric plugs, hence no clippers.
My father in law had a barber shop for 4 decades, never used a clipper too and he is a straight blade virtuoso as well.
For me, a real barber has to be an expert at the blade, not the electric clipper.
Thanks
David
i am nigh positive that most barbershops, at least in this city, are not to be trusted unless (as stated above) you work for the gov't.
my last haircut was from a girl in a williamsburg salon who tried to give me her boyfriend's haircut, which i didn't want, but she was very understanding and creative with the style i wanted.
do not go to a barbershop in the nyc unless you want something that the least interesting kids in high school had. or a ceasar.
I too used to go to a barber shop when I was a kid... Bert's Barber Shop in beautiful rural Rio Linda, California. Alas, Bert retired and moved away, and I had to settle for the Klip Joint for years. I've been searching for a good barber for soem time now, with little success. It seems most of them are now $5 Vietnamese hack joints, or located in ethnically polarized areas.
I'm still looking though... looking for the place that smells like Pinaud Clubman powder, has a subscription to Field and Stream, and has the college football game on the 20" tv in the corner.
Good barbers are truly artists with the clippers. And, IMO, the worst barber that I've ever been to STILL gave me a better haircut than the "stylists" that I tried out a few times.
To Sherwin:
To address your statement --
"I do NOT use clippers, and your statement that they are the main tool for cutting men’s hair is something I disagree with".
I certainly respect your preference -- it's your hair. However, given your stated age, that would put your birth sometime during the height of the "unisex" salon. I would wager that the odds of you having experienced a real barber are small.
I've lived a few more years than you have. After many, many haircuts at a barbershops across the land, as well as weekly haircuts during my time in the military, I believe that can safely say that the clippers and comb are most certainly the main weapons in the barber's arsenal -- the scissors come out only for the final clean-up and errant nose/eyebrow hairs -- and then, only if necessary.
The whole process took an hour. Whip, lather, spread; scalding-hot towels; wipe, lather, spread, shave. They shaved my whole face, even my forehead, not just the part where the whiskers are, with a blade sharp enough to split protons.
I went to them almost every week for a few months, until they suddenly closed down. They were the last of their kind in that area. I went to the "stylist" with the colored Kenny Loggins hair, but he had a bad attitude and the service wasn't nearly as good. Oh well.
Nice work.
Both my father and grandfather were career Army, and short hair was the rule of the day in my home. I honestly had a terrible relationship with my dad (alcohol had his attention far more than I ever did), but one of the few cherished memories I have as a boy was going to the barbershop with Dad.
Alas, I have three daughters... it looks like the father/son barbershop thing is not for me. However, you've inspired me to go look up my local barber, and get a great shave while I'm waiting the next 15 years for a grandson...
fuck yeah, the barbershop!
Grandma went to a beauty salon on the town square corner, while Grandpa went into the barber shop diagonally across the street. Benny the Barber--a man older than the hills--he'd cut Grandpa's, Dad's, and my hair. Grandpa and Benny could talk all day, if it weren't for Grandma's impatient foot-tapping on the sidewalk outside of her beauty parlor.
Benny's shop was narrow, cluttered. It smelled of hair tonic, comb and brush sterilizing fluids, stale tobacco smoke. The main lighting was from the front windows, the incandescent bulbs barely lit the rest of the shop. The floor was dingy and dirty, with a faint black-and-white tile pattern underneath what must have been 60 years of scuff marks, mud and whatever else came inside there. The chrome-framed barber chairs and matching waiting seats were all cushioned with that slippery green vinyl that was popular back in the 40s or 50s, and most had gray duct-tape patching-over in their well-worn areas. A couple of small metal desk fans were usually kept on.
Despite the debauchery appearance of this place, yea, i liked going in there. Grandpa's long gone, but i'll always remember our friday afternoon visits to Benny the Barber.
When we lived in Celebration, FL, I used to go to Carr's Barber Shop, which hearkened back to the roots of barbering. I never tried their full shave service, but the atmosphere was great, and the haircut wasn't too bad either.
Since moving to Atlanta, I've been using a male stylist at a local salon, but need to check out area barbers, if there are any.
http://www.hairmgrooming.com/
It feels a little frilly, but it's a nice change from my normal barber.
When I got back to San Diego, I spotted an article in the local paper about a barber whose shop was just 3 blocks away.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/2008041...
Rick gives a great haircut and the conversation's always great. I'm definitely a convert to barbershops.
I've read your blog for a while and really enjoy it, keep up the great work!
In this case I have to say I respectfully disagree though, you say:
"The problem is that many of the people who work at salons are not trained barbers."
Are you totally discounting the training required to be a qualified hairdresser? Have you done any research into what is taught in hairdresser / salon school? I've been to both barbers and hairdressers and have experienced bad haircuts from both; however I'd have to say I've rarely had a stylish haircut from a barber.
I know this is stereotyping, but consider the average demographic of a barber and a hairdresser. Barbers would more lean towards a middle-aged man, the hairdresser a young woman who is potentially passionate or at least interested about her work and style.
I am a big supporter of 'manliness' but out of the two sexes lets be honest; women have the edge on us when it comes to fashion sense, style, general grooming and appearance. It has always been so.
Sure it might be a more 'manly experience' going to a barber, but do you honestly believe that:
1. a trained hairdresser won't know how to cut a mans hair
2. an oldschool barber would have a better sense of what modern society considers stylish then a young qualified hairdresser that has studied her (or his) craft and obtained a qualification
Regards,
Jack
I've never gotten a shave there but it is standard procedure to finish a haircut by applying a little hot lather around the back of the ears and to the back of the neck. Then the barber takes a straight razor and cleans up the line of the hair around back.
It might be embarassing to ask the girl at SuperCuts to shave your neck for you.
The place was loaded with antique golf paraphenalia. While I never liked golf, the place clearly was one that provided personal and professional service to men, and had from the time when it was widely acknowledged that men and women are different. I think that is what marks all of the beloved barbershops described in the comments: that they reflect a culture which believes that men are not women, that they neither like to nor should be treated the same as women, and most important of all, make no effort to attract a clientele of women.
As Robert A. Heinlien said (via Lazarus Long), any time women insist on being treated the same as men, they are getting the dirty end of the stick. Women deserve to be treated very well, but that's hardly the same thing as treating them the same as men.
The ONLY reason I do not regularly patronize the local barbershop is that having short hair would make my wife unhappy.
@jackmo: Have you researched the licensing requirements for barbers? Have you asked members of both professions the ratio of women to men in their clientele? As I said, women can and often will do excellent work cutting men's hair, but I think it's reasonable to say that a man is likely to have more empathy for how other men like to look and be served than women -- especially since the differences between men and women are greatest in neurology and neurochemistry.
Every rare occasion I end up having to use a crappycuts, and hate it, but I'm out of town a LOT, and sometimes my only days home are on the traditional Sunday-Monday barbershop's closed days. I feel almost dirty coming out of there with my chemically laced scalp, clipper "shaved" neck, hair clippings everywhere (a hair dryer does NOT blow it all away!) and a complete dearth of conversation. Almost feels like I'm cheating my barber when I have to do that. Glad I'm home on Tuesday this week.
Then when it is all over you get that real nice straight neck razor shave ( with a straight razor not a bic) Only a Barber can give a straight razor shave, and I give them all: NECK shave, FACE shave, HEAD shave!
BUT HERE'S THE KICKER ALL YOU GENTLEMEN: I'M A 30'SOMETHING FEMALE. Yes, A real Barber!
V/R
CATT
she always fucks it up and cuts my hair horribly like its a number 2 all over and instead of stopping at where my head contours from the sides to the top she cuts like an inch in, so i have long hair in the middle of my head and short all over its like a hair cut you would expect a 7yr old to have.
Jesus i was stewing about this I really was, so I went online to see if I could find anyone who thought that women shouldn't cut hair for men and I found this article.
' Amen', makes sense I'm never going back to a unisex I don't care even if i go to a barber who fucks my hair up I would rather take pride in knowing that I'm doing my part to restoring an industry that never should have left us.
I myself have never been to a Barber shop never had an old man to take me only a mother so thus the reason why I always went to a unisex hair salon,
I sincerely Thank you for writing this article, mark my words for now ons the only place this guy is Going for a hair cut is his local "Barber Shop".
Never again to a stylist.
Man on!
I think the type of barbershops that you talk about are an endangered species. One barbershop I went to even cut women's hair. If I have a date or a job interview, I'd rather go to a hair stylist.
We are in this business to make money, and what we dont know we cannot get paid for. Anyone trying to make it in this business should have a well rounded knowledge in all areas having to do with hair. And with these MEN complaining about $20 services, mybe it make more sense finnacially to do womens hair?
So remember that when your looking around for a old time barber to cut your hair for $5. He left to do your wife's for $40, and she dosent bitch about it!
If your wondering why i have both lisences, it's because i own a barber shop. And what makes money, is cute girls cuting hair. So i have a babers lisence so i can put up a barber pole.
I am a "straight" female and I get my hair cut at the best barber here in Brooklyn New York. I emphasize "straight" ,,, just because I keep my hair so short doesn't mean that I am not staight.
Any way, there is nothing like a short hair cut from a barber. The "hair stylists" don't know how to blend or fade properly. I don't have a fade, but I love to watch the barber work.
I currently go to the barber every 2 weeks, I suppose after the summer I will extend the time due to letting it grown in a bit fuller. My older son now uses the same barber and he is very satisfied,
I have been using ny barber for nearly 16 years, When he first came to this country from Russia he harldy knew any English. Now he speaks English and he knows a little Italian and Spansh!
So ladies, don't be afraid to go to the barber if you want a great clean and even hair cut.
Enjoy!
my father was a barber for 58 years
if you are having trouble finding a barbershop near you it is probably because most barbers do not make enough money to be located in a prominent location
try looking in the phone book because most barber shops are in out of the way places......
and to those of you who visit your local barber i have a fews tips for you
show up with clean hair
styled the way you normally wear your hair (if you have let your hair get so long that you can not style it right , Shame on you )
talk to the barber about your hair and what you expect it to look like and we will probably have a suggestion or two based on your facial shape or head shape or hairline density or so on..........
in short, we are trained to analyze and recommend what is most suited to enhance your assets and de-emphasize your unflattering features
hair grows about one half inch per month so try to get a haircut every month......
and if you can't make it .....send the money......!
thank you
So, I am totally understanding what you are saying. The Barbershop is like a sacred sanctuary for guys. Where else is it just a matter of course to wait for a haircut with the mix of reading materials from Playboy to Popular Mechanics to Time to The Wallstreet Journal to Car and Driver. Occassionally there will be the copy of People, but you won't find Better Homes and Gardens on the selection.
Yes, the barbershop is a manly place.
Im actually your Traditional Barber meets big city Looks. If you could imagine a barber from the 50's mixed with a New York City Stylist.
I am One of a kind never formulated before in the sense that no one else does the work I do... from a Hot towel shave, to the newest mens hairstyle. I am a "Fusion Barber", I invented the style and the term itself.
I invite you to Visit our website to learn more...
www.Msubstance.com
If your in the Nyc/NJ area you have to come and get a haircut at
Manny's Professional Grooming.
God Bless
now. that's what i get for going to the manly-man barber.
i wasn't even into him when i first met him. and then
all of the conversation and banter and politicking etc...
it's crazy, like i just...
today was the first day i went in to see him, just to say hi
and not to get a cut.
i'm going to save up and buy him some clippers for his
birthday.
he's straight and i'm gay, but oh well. shit happens.
Thanks!
I was a barber back in the mid sixties in Oklahoma. My most memorable job was at a shop in Norman, home of OU (Go Sooners!) I worked there for about 2 years or so between '67 and '69, and have some wonderful memories. I left Norman on my 21st birthday, but that's another story.
Our shop was owned by a man named Jack Mock who had been there on "Campus Corner" for over 40 years at that time. He was in his 70's when I was there and he ran a really old fashioned barber shop, complete with a shoeshine "boy", an elderly black man whose lips were deformed from always having the stub of a cigar, most of the time unlit, stuck between them, but who kept the shop clean except for the constant, but somewhat pleasant smell of that cigar. Today, the public wouldn't stand for it, but back then, the world was vastly different. The majority of us smoked, and nobody objected to it.
Being only a half block from the campus, our typical customers were college age young men. Women very rarely even entered the shop, and to have one come in wanting a haircut would have been as foreign to us as anything--it just wasn't imaginable! If they came in at all, they would be bringing their little boys in for a haircut, or for some other legitimate reason.
Hippies were just making their presence and were the butt of jokes when seen passing by our shop. Of course they didn't frequent the barber shops at all. Luckily for us, that was still in the days before the "unisex" craze came onto the scene, and nearly all men, young and old alike, came to a regular barber shop.
Conversation in the shop consisted of nearly anything, but a barber could not afford to comment too much one way or the other on topics such as religion or politics. Today, I guess they call that being "politically correct", but that left a lot of room for everything else.
A haircut consisted of having the customer sit down in the chair, wrapping a thin paper neck strip around his neck and then fastening the chair cloth around his neck with a metal clip. I would always ask, just out of courtesy, how he would want his hair cut but could usually tell by what style he was already wearing. Most would just say they wanted a regular haircut, but everyone was, and is, an individual. I would start out using the clippers and comb for the initial cut, and then finish up using the "shears" (scissors was a bad word!) and finally, maybe the thinnng shears to blend everything in.
At the finish of the haircut, I would shave, with an old time straight razor, what we called the "outline" around the ears and down each side of the neck, sometimes shaving across the neck if it needed it. I carefully tucked a small white cloth towel into the shirt collar which I used to wipe off the remaining lather, when I was through shaving the outline. Before using the razor, I would always give it a slap or two on the "strop" which hung from the side of the chair. Of course, I obtained the lather either with a mug and brush and hot water, or a regular hot lather making machine.
With the outline shaved and all the lather wiped off, I would apply a small amount of aftershave lotion around the ears and neck with my hands, fan it with that towel to dry it, finally, apply a bit of talc to a brush and brush the customers ears and neck and try to get as much loose hair off him as possible.
Between the smell of the smoke, the aftershave, and the talcum powder, the shop had a very unique fragrance that was very masculine, and one which is rarely experienced today.
Removing the chair cloth signaled the end of the hair cut, at which time he'd pay me. When he stepped out of the chair, he felt good!
Haircuts were $1.50 at that time, and I recieved a 75% commission. One was very lucky to give 30 haircuts in a day's time, usually on a Saturday in most shops, with the weekdays maybe 10 and sometimes less. At this particular location, though, we had an edge. The University of Oklahoma had an ROTC program that all male students, unless exempt, were required to take. It also required an inspection every Tuesday so all the guys in ROTC would come in on Tuesday and get a haircut for drill. That made it seem like having 2 Saturdays, very unusual in the barber business.
I had some nice times there and even met some celebrities, believe it or not. That was in the time of Chuck Fairbanks, head football coach for OU, who came in every other Thursday evening and I'd cut his hair. He was one of the very few who didn't want to talk about football. As a matter of fact, he didn't talk about much at all, but he was a nice guy.
I also met Jayne Jayroe, who was Miss America in, I believe, 1967, She brought her husband's combat boots into the shop to get shined for his ROTC drill inspection.
I also almost met another celebrity one day. He'd been raised there in Norman and was good friends with Jack, my boss. I'd stepped down the sidewalk to a drugstore for a cup of coffee one afternoon and when I got back, Jack told me that James Garner had stuck his head in the back door and said "Hi". I just missed him by about 5 minutes!
The long hair movement brought about by the hippies changed the barber business and even the men who were not "hippies" per se, could let their hair grow for a month or more, as opposed to getting it cut every week. That, in itself, cut the barber businss by more than half. I eventually got out of that profession and moved to other things that paid better.
The years have sped by since the mid '60s and I've seen many changes in the world--some good and some bad, but I'll never forget working at Norman on Campus Corner!
Grandpa Beardsley, my dad, uncle, cousin, brother, myself, sister, 2 brother-in-laws, my son, and 3 nephews are Barbers! We have 6 shops across America, my son and I work in my shop in the Chicago area. I don't think there is a better place to get a haircut or shave than at a barber shop! (especially one of ours!)
We offer old fashion services in most of our shops, including specializing in Flat-tops, Fades, and Hot Lather Shaves.
I have old porcelain barber chairs in my shop - AWESOME CHAIRS! I had ordered new barber chairs for another shop of mine and I received five pieces of junk that you pumped up with your foot! I started looking around, and travelled as far as Detroit to buy some REAL CHAIRS! I had one from 1901, it was made from oak and metal, had to sell it to make room for something I didn't mind using daily...now all my chairs are from around 1920 - 1930. I must say, these chairs are a pleasure to work with, and they are older than ALL my customers! (with the exception of a couple)
Concerning the comments about barbers vs cosmetologists, the difference is training and practice IMHO. When I finished barber college I went to work with my dad, and this is what I heard, " Son, I am sick of this barber college garbage!" Dad was a perfectionist! I would be finishing a flat-top...dad would be cutting hair next to me and I would hear, " You aren't done with that are you?", I would stammer around a little, and then dad woud command me, "Walk across the room, and look at it from there!", I'd drag myself, humiliated, to the far side of the barber shop and look at my embarrassed customer...the top of his hair would be nice and flat, but, leaning hard to one side or the other, "Now get back over here and fix it!" I suffered at the hands of my 'real teacher' dad until I 'graduated' and I bought dad's shop from him.
This is the difference in the profession today and what is was in its glory years...training. Barbers in training were required to complete nearly a year of formal school, this was tested on the state level - practical test, and a written test. Then three years of serving under a Master Barber was required. Now, the requirements consist of nine months of schooling, and then a written exam on the state level. Afterwards, $25 per year is all that is required till you die. It is little wonder that the profession has lost some of its 'magic'.
I delve into the 'wrong' topics on a daily basis. Politics, religion, and sports are topics that are discussed passionately and rather forcefully! What a job! I LOVE it!
Where else can you visit with people you like (most of them) all day...and, GET PAID FOR IT?! If you would care to know more about AMERICA'S FAMILY OF BARBERS, that's me and mine...please visit: http://www.beardsleysbarbershop.com
Long live America! ...and of course, her Barbers!
I have been barbering for over 20 years and own and run The Melbourne Barber Shop down here in Australia, I love my trade and mostly enjoy the many many relationships i have with my loyal clients, so many years now.
Feel free check out my web site.
www.melbournebarbershop.com.au
Its good to see folks want to keep the trade going for generations to come.
cheers George