Category: Hair Styles (Page 23 of 24)

Is Tom Brady going to a hair restoration clinic?

SAN DIEGO - OCTOBER 24: Tom Brady  of the New England Patriots during warm up against the San Diego Chargers at Qualcomm Stadium on October 24, 2010 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

The AP is reporting that Tom Brady may be using the services of a prominent hair restoration clinic to keep his poster-boy image intact. Naturally, we don’t have a problem with this whether the news story ends up being confirmed or debunked. How each person handles hair loss is his own business, and hair restoration is becoming a very popular option. Let’s just say if he is using this procedure, then the clinic, Leonard Hair Transplant Associates, is doing a damn good job as Brady looks more and more like Kenny Stabler and some of the other quarterbacks from the 1970s these days.

The Barbershop Raneaissance in New York (and elsewhere)

The New York Times has a great article on the barbershop trend on how it’s sweeping Lower Manhattan in New York City.

“As soon as I saw the place, I felt this deep, inner yearning,” he said. “It’s very striking, with these red barber chairs and this fantastic photo-mural. And it’s rare to see well-dressed, well-groomed men cutting the hair of equally well-dressed guys.”

He was convinced that he’d found the spot where he could get the short, early-1960s-model haircut — complete with a neat side part — that he had wanted for years. And he was right.

Moreover, Mr. Chirico, 26, discovered what other young men in New York have begun to notice in recent months: In the city’s more style-conscious ZIP codes, there has been a renaissance of that much-loved old neighborhood standby, the barbershop.

Proving Fran Lebowitz’s oft-cited dictum that “you’re only as good as your last haircut,” authentic-looking barbershops have popped up all over lower Manhattan. Done up with, say, vintage lighting fixtures, antique barber chairs and, of course, a big glass jar of blue Barbicide on the counter, they are offering good, solid haircuts and shaves for less than half the price of a fancy salon cut. And in a kind of tonsorial version of chicken-or-the-egg, their arrival is perfectly timed, coinciding with the twin desires among urbane young men to tame their unruly locks and look neater and sharper from the neck up, and do it in all-American, gentlemanly, modestly priced fashion, far from the salon smells of peroxide and perfume.

The article points out that there’s a wide variety of barbershops in the city but that many of them can be found in lower Manhattan.

As we know very well, however, this trend goes far beyond New York, and the interest in vintage shaving methods is expressed in more ways than just the resurgence of traditional barbershops.

On eBay, according to a spokeswoman, there’s been a surge of interest in vintage shaving, grooming and barbershop paraphernalia. In comparing a two-week period earlier this month with a two-week period six months ago, she said sales of merchandise returned by the search term barbershop were up 77 percent, sales of Barbicide were up 60 percent, and sales of items found by searching for the words vintage barbershop sign were up 251 percent. On Amazon, archaic devices like straight razors and safety razors, and grooming products (including mustache wax and combs) from Gilded-Age-y brands like Edwin Jagger and Colonel Conk have been selling so well that Amazon created a special category — “classic shave” — to showcase them all. Charles Kirkpatrick, the executive officer of the National Association of Barber Boards of America, said that the number of licensed barbers had grown roughly 10 percent in the last two years, to 245,000 from 225,000.

These are trends that we’re happy to celebrate.

Bullz-Eye reviews L’Oréal Professionnel Homme Mat and Homme Clay

Loreal Homme Clay.As male grooming gets more and more attention, we’ll continue to see great products like the L’Oréal Professionnel Homme collection coming to the forefront. Bullz-Eye recently had a chance to review the L’Oréal Professionnel Homme Clay and Loreal Homme Mat, two hair sculpting products from L’Oréal’s Professionnel Homme collection for men.

Here’s what Bullz-Eye had to say:
Bullz-Eye.com tested L’Oréal Professionnel Homme Mat which is a sculpting pomade (a fancy word for a greasy or waxy substance) and L’Oréal Professionnel Homme Clay which is a really strong hold clay! Keep in mind that our goal was to get an effortlessly cool look with lasting results. We tried Mat on wet and dry hair and all it took was rubbing a small amount bewteen your hands then working it through your hair for the desired look you want to obtain. I went with a more groomed look and I must say mat kept my hair in check and lasted all day and evening long. I changed things up with Clay and went for a messy look working it into dry hair. I ended up with a very strong hold and an intense matte finish and the look I was aiming for.

For the full L’Oréal Professionnel Homme Clay and Mat review, head over to the Bullz-Eye Blog.

15 hairstyles men made mainstream over the years

Emile Hirsch.We don’t hear about men’s hairstyles nearly as much as we hear about women’s, but men have struggled to find a style to fit their lives since we became self-aware. Over the past several decades, men have made all manner of hairstyles popular, for good or ill. Lucky Tiger has fifteen examples, but these are just a few of our favorites.

The Pompadour (1950s)

A trademark of the rockabilly subculture that embraced rock and roll and fast cars in the 1950s, the Pompadour hairstyle for men continues to reign supreme among models, A-List celebrities and advocates of modern fashion. The most notable Pompadour-wearers of all time include Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Frank Sinatra, although contemporary actor Emile Hirsch sports the style with elegance.

The Afro (1960s-70s)

Made popular in the 1960s and 1970s by celebrities Cicely Tyson and Jimi Hendrix, the Afro is perhaps the most imitated trendy hairstyle in pop culture history. The Afro needs no explanation, for everyone knows what it is, but the best Afros require the same length of tightly curled, coarse and thick hair all around the head.

The Mullet (1970s-80s)

Football players, pop stars and TV stars everywhere supported the Mullet in the early 1980s, a style that was short in the front and sides, and long in the back. Many considered the Mullet a good thing to have when applying for a job in the 80s, but today, the brutally outdated hairstyle is more or less an open invitation towards public ridicule. Despite enduring public outcries against the Mullet, however, Duane “Dog” Chapman from A&E’s Dog The Bounty Hunter still finds the style attractive.

For the full list, check out the article at Lucky Tiger, complete with picture examples of the fifteen hairstyles men have made popular over the years.

Facial Hair—As Seen on TV

Gilette Pros.Our own Will Harris over at Bullz-Eye has been covering the Gillette line of products as part of the “Gillette Pros” series. His latest article covers the different styles of facial hair you see on TV.

· The Alternate-Universe Goatee. It’s a longstanding staple of science fiction television that, should a show’s characters ever find themselves in an alternate universe where everyone has a counterpart; the counterpart of one of the clean-shaven male characters will sport a goatee. Growing one of these is an instant opportunity to do things different from the way you ordinarily would, and it also provides you with an instant out: just shave and say, “That wasn’t me! It must have been my counterpart from that other universe!” Works every time.

For more on the most recognizable facial styles, check out the full article at Bullz-Eye.com.

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