|

If you have any comments or suggestions, please e-mail us.
|

|
As barbers and
grooming advisors, we will guide you in achieving the best hairstyle
for your type of hair, and remember have a hairstyle that suits you,
not that is dictated by fashion. We will give you the right advice on
choosing haircuts to suit your hair.
We offer also services by
appointment only.. We make every effort to set an on time schedule in
order to address and exceed your service needs and as well as our
other guests.
To reserve an appointment, call
00966 52 893 464
during business hours.
|
|
UNDER CUT |
 |
 |
|
" Barber's Joke" |
Barber
Surprised
There
is this Good Ol' Barber in some city in US.
One day a Florist goes to him for a haircut. After the cut, he
goes to pay the Barber and the barber replies:
'I am Sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I am doing a
Community Service'. The Florist is happy and leaves the shop.
The next morning when the Barber goes to open his shop, there is
a Thank you Card and a dozen roses waiting at his door. A Cop
goes for a haircut and he also goes to pay the Barber and the
barber replies:
'I am Sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I am doing a
Community Service'.
The Cop is happy and leaves the shop.
The next morning when the Barber goes to open his shop, there is
a Thank you Card and a dozen Donuts waiting at his door. A Desi
Software Engineer goes for a haircut and he also goes to pay the
Barber and barber replies;
'I am Sorry, I cannot accept money from you; I am doing a
Community Service'.
The next morning when the Barber goes to open his shop, guess
what he finds there -
A Dozen Desis waiting for a free Haircut...... |
|
|
"STYLE OF YESTERDAY"
 |
The Conk Hairdo originated in the 1920s
and was stylized by entertainer Cab Calloway. The style was an
attempt by Black males to straighten their hair to make it look
like that of White men, and was accomplished by enduring a truly
painstaking process of "relaxing" the hair with a solution
dominated by lye (this process was portrayed in the movie
Malcolm X.)
In order to keep the humidity from causing the hair to return to
its natural curly state, men would wear fabric on their heads
called do-rags.
By
the mid-1960s, the conk died out, as most entertainers (and
therefore the general public in kind) began to move towards a
more "natural" look which emphasized pride in Black heritage, a
look that would eventually evolve into the Afro. |






|
|
|