A female-to-male transsexual e-friend is ready for her first male haircut and is agonising over where to go. Now, I think she should go to a men's barbers and get a cheap-ass clipper job, because that's what most men do. Going to a stylist is going to get her a butch haircut, not a male haircut. She doesn't want to look like a butch dyke, she wants to look like a bloke. Thoughts?
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Date: 2007-11-01 11:11 pm (UTC)I suppose the question is whether she wants the haircut of a male that cares about their hair, or not. Sure a cheap clipper job is an option - and might be worth experiencing (once, at any rate).
Another option might be to look at a hair magazine for a pic of a style she likes (most of them have at least a small section of bloke hair) and take that to a stylist. A decent stylist, who understands what she's after, might able to make her hair look more male than the cheap clipper job would do.
But it's a bit hard to say without knowing what she looks like etc. Also, without knowing what the difference between a butch and male haircut would be.
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Date: 2007-11-02 12:37 am (UTC)One day, I will re-read a paragraph like that and it will make sense. I know what I mean, anyway. Feel free to quiz me on what exactly I do mean if that was garbled.
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Date: 2007-11-02 09:00 am (UTC)It seems from eyeing my co-workers that clip-jobs of various lengths are in reasonable vogue right now. If his/her head and face-shape are too delicate she does risk looking waif-like and SineadO'Connor-y though.
But yeah, clip jobs definitely make a visual impression that's arresting, but they're colder in winter. Buy a woolly hat, too.
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Date: 2007-11-02 09:05 am (UTC)Yeah, I was wondering that too - but stuck with "she" because that's how
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Date: 2007-11-02 10:52 am (UTC)Hair type also plays a part I'd say. Very fine hair can look fuzzy and wispy and cute, unless you chop layers into it and coarsen it up a bit. Which is a bit more sophisticated than I can do with clippers.
I object to the "most men go to a men's barbers". I mean, you lot all work in IT, so what would you know about hair styles? ;-) (thought I'd get my kicks in first). There is nothing wrong with going somewhere like Toni and Guy (OK, apart from the cost). But, make sure its a quieter one - they don't tell you, but they have 2 sort of appointments. In busy and/or smaller salons (e.g. Bath), its a half hour for men. In quieter and/or bigger ones (e.g. Bristol) its 45 mins.
I've never seen a guy turn up with a picture that he wants done. However, I have seen people choose styles from a magazine in the salon. And done that myself last time.
What I object to most is you seem to pay the same whether you say "numr 2 all ofer, mate" and spend 20 minutes or go into detailed discussion over style, have layers cut in, texturise it, use the clippers here, 3 types or scissors and a straight razor.
I think Toni and Guy are perfectly capable of doing a masculine hair style, whether its a buzz or something longer. They're not so great with blokes with long hair though, so definitely something shorter.
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Date: 2007-11-02 11:08 am (UTC)And yeah, I have a tuft in my occipital crease that takes ages to get out, too. Le sigh.