Lies I was told in Beauty School.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Some people know, and some people do not. But I once was a practicing Cosmetologist. Having been raised in the beauty industry it just seemed like something I should do, that I HAD to do! I wasn't the best, and I wasn't the worst. Which was a feat considering my education, which was overpriced and underwhelming? I was told a lot of things that made no sense to me in Beauty School (BS) (hahaha), but I figured things held a different meaning for me and I understood parts of the business that even my instructors wouldn't. Why? Because, my Grandmother had her own shop for almost 50 years, everything I know about color I learned from her before I was seven. So, color theory class was BORING. But, to get to the whole point of this post. The biggest lie I was ever told during BS was that you should choose your stylist based on their hair, or their families hair.  For some reason this made sense to me for a little bit. My Grandmother was amazing, and she always looked impeccable(I wouldn't learn until later that to look this way she woke up 2 hours before everyone else and coiffed her hair and beautified her face then dressed to the 9's before cooking breakfast)! She also did my hair and my mother's for years and years and to be honest my hair never looked better than when my Grandma was doing it.

But, the reality of everything hit me after about 9 months of doing hair. I switched shops and worked with a friend from BS. We were both building our clientele then and had PLENTY of time to make ourselves look AMAZEBALLS! Her boys and husband had the nicest hair that side of the Mississippi. Then life got real, we got clients, we switched shops. We had no time! So, what am I saying?

Do not choose your stylist based on his/her hair, unless you're going to base it off how "not perfect" their hair looks. A stylist spends her day on her feet; there is rarely a break between clients. In the off chance she manages to get any free time, she's going to spend it trying to choke down some food, or to have a bio break. Also, it's rare that a stylist cuts and colors her own hair, so you're probably looking at someone else's work.

Do not choose your stylist based on their families hair. Some do like to spend their off time making their people look good. Others don't want to spend their off time doing hair, sure we love it, but you have to take a break sometimes.

Pick your stylist based on their clientele's hair. Its 2013 the majority of stylists have a portfolio; don't be afraid to ask to look at it before you go sitting in someone's chair. Supposedly, your hair is your crowning glory, be careful with it (even if it does grow back), choose wisely. And if you find someone you love who does a good job. TIP THEM!!
A normal tip is about 20% of your service; if there was shampoo girl/boy tip them separately from your stylist.
I even tip on horrible service, but just enough for them to know they need to keep working on their skills usually about 10%.

And above all remember your stylist is:

A Beautician, Not a Magician.


Be reasonable in your expectations.

No way that crap is true!

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

I think we've all done it in the wee hours of the morning. There we are diligently pinning away on Pinterest when we come across a pin that seems too good to be true. Recently, I saw a post about applying brown sugar water to your hair to straighten it without heat. My inner stylist called total bull crap, but part of me was like "OOO! That's awesome!". I clicked on the link and was taken to some site that had nothing to do with the pin. Spam (womp womp). But, me being me decided I wanted to try it anyway.

I have no link for a pin because I do not want to send you to any sort of spam sites. I googled brown sugar water for hair straightening and came up with a bunch of different Yahoo question pages. So, I took matter into my own hands. Here's what I did.

1. Microwave one cup of water for 2 minutes (I wanted it hot enough to disolve the brown sugar).

2. Add 1 tablespoon brown sugar and stir, stir, stir (I used light brown sugar and honestly do not know if there is a difference between light and not light?)

3. Pour into spray bottle.

4. Let cool.

5. Apply to clean wet hair and let dry.

I took a before picture yesterday so I styled my hair in the same manner that I did yesterday..which means I put some jumbo velcro rollers on the ends after my hair had already dried and walked around the house for 20 minutes.

Here is a  visual of the result:

The left is yesterday without brown sugar water, and the right is today.
Did it work? I don't know my hair has a mild almost invisible wave to it that I can usually brush out. So, while I can not attest to it straightening curly hair I can tell you that my hair seems less frizzy (not sticky), and a lot fuller! I have super thin baby fine hair and am balding so I was very pleased with how full this made my hair appear!

Have a pin you think is total crap but our still curious about? Let me know, I'll try it out and share the results.
Same goes for products. 



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