I love visiting the salon! I am a devoted wearer of hair extensions and I visit my wonderful stylist at least every 8 weeks!
Hair extensions (or ‘weave’ as it more commonly referred to by black women) have increasingly becoming a staple beauty item for the woman of colour and weekend after weekend talented hairdressers perform their magic and transform the look of countless women in a matter of hours.
I visited my hairdresser last week and she is a true inspiration. She opened her small but busy salon in the East End of London 12 years ago and she has astutely managed and grown her business by providing an excellent service at a very fair price. She is an example of the type of enterprising entrepreneurs that this nation needs – entrepreneurs that not only provide an invaluable service to her customers but also vital employment for others.
Her passion is palpable as she tends to your tresses.
As she worked away on the afternoon of my visit, she told me about a program she had watched on the trusty British institution that is the BBC (which has produced some EXCELLENT programming this year – well worth the licence fee!).
It was a retrospective of the life of the British hairdresser, Vidal Sassoon, CBE – part 4 of the Imagine series on BBC1.
She was practically effervescing as she retold his story – how he ascended from poverty to styling the crème de la crème of the 60’s set – Sassoon is a visionary, an artisan and a connoisseur! She found him to be a true inspiration.
Sassoon (born 17 January 1928) is credited with creating a simple geometric, “Bauhaus-inspired” hair style, also called the bob.
Sassoon’s works include the geometric perm and the famous “Nancy Kwan” hairstyles. They were all modern and low-maintenance. In 1963, Sassoon created a short, angular hairstyle cut on a horizontal plane – The 5 Point Cut – which has been a key force in the commercial direction of hair styling.
His styling epitomised the revolution of the Britain in the 60s, framing the faces of influencial trend setters such as fashion designer Mary Quant and model Grace Coddington.
I have to agree with my hairdresser – he is a true inspiration.
The ‘Twittershere’ was also awash with commendations for the great hairdresser – here are just a few tweets…
@EmmaR_Mac Just watched BBC’s Imagine; Vidal Sassoon, A Cut Above. What a life. What a man. Amazing. Love him ♥ xxx #VidalSassoon
@speckyx Catching up with the Imagine doc about #VidalSassoon it is bloody brilliant. What a top bloke. Defo getting my graduated bob cut back in!!
@elliesharpe ‘the only place where success come before work is a dictionary’ #VidalSassoon
What I enjoyed the most about the documentary was witnessing Sassoon’s zest for his profession and sheer dedication to being the best he could be. He radiated a contentment that is not often seen – despite a tumultuous personal life, he is genuinely thankful for all he has achieved and attained.