I think “bangs” is very regional. Denver Colorado barber here. I was always taught fringe and not the word bangs. Bangs seems a little outdated the way it was described to us. It became a popular term in the 20’s with flapper style and a blunt “bang”. Most barbers use fringe tho. At least in this part of the country. Love your videos and such a great voice! You’ve been a great help :)
The barber is very meticulous and explains every methodical movement in an easy to understand verbiage and tone and it was extremely educational. Thank you😊
🤓 “bangtail” which was a term for a 🐎 horse’s tail that had been cut straight across. The blunt cut across the tail was called “banging” thus Americans used it in their way to describe a horse they way they wanted their face framed. But we can thank Hollywood writers for making it popular and cemented in our pop culture. But stylist and barbers in America also say fringe even if clients say bangs.😅
Hello do you have any other social media accounts I can follow you on? I’m currently in college learning to become a barber but I would really like to do one of your course 😊 x
Hey Leigha I recently came off Instagram as I found it was really hurting my productivity. So I’m pretty much just here now. But if you join the channel as a member there are quite a number of in depth tutorials for different styles on there. It is very cheap to join compared to buying a course and for as long as you are in there you will gain exclusive members first access to all the new content I make.
American here.... we do call it bangs I don't know why. But we call fringe anything wispy around the edges fringe. So if someone told me they wanted bangs I'd know they meant hair covering their forehead. If they said fringe I'd think they meant at their neckline or around the ears.
When you started the first side in the front, you didn't take a guide from the back?? Did you just eyeball the same amount you took off in the back and then joined it all? Because when you did the other side you definitely took a guide from the back working toward the front.
That’s a good question. There is short hair in the middle section on top. So for the left and right panels I look for a reference from the middle, in this case I would cut to the shortest length closest to the third knuckle. That said it’s totally ok to cut on instinct. If you are confident that you are cutting the correct length then don’t worry about looking for a guideline.
@@theoneminutebarberI believe they meant when you cut the side at 7:19 from the front. You didn’t have a guide to work with like you did on the left side when you went from back to the front. I was going to ask you the same question. Respectfully, JR North Carolina USA
@@johnreidroberts2838 Ah yes I understand. No there is no guide here other than a best guess. I suppose I am breaking the rules a bit, but I just cut to what I think it should be at times.
I think “bangs” is very regional. Denver Colorado barber here. I was always taught fringe and not the word bangs. Bangs seems a little outdated the way it was described to us. It became a popular term in the 20’s with flapper style and a blunt “bang”. Most barbers use fringe tho. At least in this part of the country.
Love your videos and such a great voice! You’ve been a great help :)
Interesting, I’m now going to have to research flapper style too.
I´m learning haircut, so I´m a complet beginner, never do a haircut before. You´re way of teaching belongs to the best.
I appreciate that! Hope you gain a lot from the tutorials. Thank you 🙏
The barber is very meticulous and explains every methodical movement in an easy to understand verbiage and tone and it was extremely educational. Thank you😊
Thank you so much ☺️
🤓 “bangtail” which was a term for a 🐎 horse’s tail that had been cut straight across. The blunt cut across the tail was called “banging” thus Americans used it in their way to describe a horse they way they wanted their face framed. But we can thank Hollywood writers for making it popular and cemented in our pop culture. But stylist and barbers in America also say fringe even if clients say bangs.😅
Very very interesting. And makes sense.
Another work of art. Thank you for that.
Thank you ☺️
Perfect, easy to understand tutorial - thank you. 💯
You're welcome! Thank you ☺️
Отличная работа!
It's amazing ❤
Hola amigo soy de salta argentina un saludo QUE INCREIBLE TECNICAS EL CORTE TE QUEDO MUY BIEN GRACIAS POR SEMEJANTE TUTORIAL UN ABRAZO
Saludos 👋 muchas gracias, soy feliz tu disfrutar
Türkçe ses koymuş king Turkish sound❤❤ perfect sir
🙏teşekkürler
Well, I think you are a master!👏👏👏
Thank you! 😃🙏
Thanks!
Great video .. I been using your technique.. just wanted to say thanks .. but the back is hard to cut
You will get there Edward. It is a matter of repetition. Trust me if you keep trying you will get really good at it.
Amazing
You are
Obrigado por colocar em português 🙌
🇧🇷
De nada
Love from Pakistan ❤
Assistindo daqui de São Paulo 🇧🇷
Bienvenido
Hello do you have any other social media accounts I can follow you on? I’m currently in college learning to become a barber but I would really like to do one of your course 😊 x
Hey Leigha I recently came off Instagram as I found it was really hurting my productivity. So I’m pretty much just here now. But if you join the channel as a member there are quite a number of in depth tutorials for different styles on there. It is very cheap to join compared to buying a course and for as long as you are in there you will gain exclusive members first access to all the new content I make.
Acho que o nome específico franja e bangs, veio por estilo de corte o local de pais e região
Hola como estas no savia que eras escosia mi hijo conoce escosia estoy aprendiendo Saludos desde México grasias
Gracias, saludos desde Escosia 🏴👋😀
Смешной русский перевод, прядИ...и еще странные комментарии 😂 а парикмахеру спасибо за стрижку!❤
It’s not perfect translation. I am relying on AI to make the translation. But I hope it helps.
????????? 갑자기 한국어가 나오네... 잘 보고 있었는데 너무 좋아요.... 와.....
I am trying to put all my videos into Korean. It will take time but I’m working on it 😁🇰🇷
من العراق 🇮🇶🇮🇶🇮🇶❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️👍👍👍👍👍👍⚘️⚘️⚘️⚘️⚘️⚘️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🫶🏾🩷🩷🩷💛💛💛💙💙💙💙💚💚💚🧡🧡🧡🧡🌹🌹🌹🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷
Welcome 👋🇮🇶🏴
American here.... we do call it bangs I don't know why. But we call fringe anything wispy around the edges fringe. So if someone told me they wanted bangs I'd know they meant hair covering their forehead. If they said fringe I'd think they meant at their neckline or around the ears.
The mystery continues. 😁❓
Someone must know where bangs started 😁
Супер🎉
I live in America and when I went to Cosmetology school we learned its called fringe. I honestly don't know hoe bangs was started
Me too. But I hear it all the time.
❤❤❤❤
Супер все ясно👍 привет из Казахстана🇰🇿🫶
Thank you ☺️
When you started the first side in the front, you didn't take a guide from the back?? Did you just eyeball the same amount you took off in the back and then joined it all? Because when you did the other side you definitely took a guide from the back working toward the front.
That’s a good question. There is short hair in the middle section on top. So for the left and right panels I look for a reference from the middle, in this case I would cut to the shortest length closest to the third knuckle.
That said it’s totally ok to cut on instinct. If you are confident that you are cutting the correct length then don’t worry about looking for a guideline.
@@theoneminutebarberI believe they meant when you cut the side at 7:19 from the front. You didn’t have a guide to work with like you did on the left side when you went from back to the front.
I was going to ask you the same question.
Respectfully,
JR
North Carolina
USA
@@johnreidroberts2838 Ah yes I understand. No there is no guide here other than a best guess. I suppose I am breaking the rules a bit, but I just cut to what I think it should be at times.
Супер!