 What's up guys, welcome to today's video on the video today. I'm gonna share with you guys a quick and easy technique on how to cut a long bob using the TriRazor. The TriRazor is a brand new tool that we just launched on Shop FSE. It's available worldwide for pre-order right now. So if you guys are looking for a new razor tool, this is the one. This little razor is three tools in one. You've got your 100% cutting side. You've got two texturizing sides that take out different amounts of hair. It's a super fun tool to cut hair with. I get excited every time I get to use it. So again, it's available for pre-order. Go to shopfse.com after this video. Hope you guys enjoy it. Here we go. So what I like to do is I like to split off the front and back and also the fringe area. I went a little bit deeper with the fringe area today. So I'm gonna show you guys that right here. So we created a triangle shape right here in the fringe. And then what I'm gonna do is a couple sections that I haven't shown you yet. Right here on the sides, I created a diamond shape on top, which I'll show you guys in a second. That really just took out that crown area. And then what I'm gonna do is take from this point where that point comes out right there and go right down to the hairline right here. So this separates the hair that wants to be in the back and then we're gonna part away the hair that wants to live on the side, just like that. Flip this up nice and tight. I'm gonna do the same thing on the opposite side from that point of the diamond down to the hairline. Comb this over nice and tight. Now I've got a diamond shape on top. Let me flip to the top camera here. You can see, so we've got our diamond shape. So point into the front and it goes out to the corners here and then back to the occipital bone in the back here, separating this whole top crown area. So that's the sectioning breakdown. The way that I'm gonna start this haircut is I wanna start it in the back and we're gonna work on a pivoted line cutting round layers within the haircut. I'm not worried about the perimeter length yet and I'm gonna start by taking a vertical section straight out of the center back. So what I'm doing is I'm taking a vertical section right here and I'm gonna bring it straight out from the head, straight in the back here. Now I don't wanna remove too much density from the bottom. Let's just pretend like this client and really the reality of this mannequin here, it's got a little bit skinnier hair. Because it's thinner, I don't wanna go in and just kind of carve at it. I want and or scoop out too much weight. I wanna just make a nice little line throughout. I bring the hair out straight out to me like this and then I take a hundred percent cutting side. So I just go in with my cut elevation straight out from the head and then a hundred percent cutting and I just slide right through the hair. So you can see how easy that just passes through. Now I'm gonna take another line right next to it and I'm gonna take a little bit of what I just cut as a guideline and I'm gonna push that guideline over to my new hair. Just like that, I'm gonna come out and see my line right there. So then I'm just gonna slide and layer through. I'm not worried about the perimeter length. That's one thing I definitely want you guys to understand today is perimeter length I'm gonna cut later and I'm gonna take another section and that's gonna come straight out from where it lives. This is why it's so important to get your sectioning right at the beginning because I don't want to create short pieces around the ear as I'm cutting this round shape. Typically when you cut a round shape and you're coming around the corner you end up working your way up the hairline and you get shorter hair. Don't want to do that in this cut. I want to keep the hair even all the way throughout. So this section goes right to the hairline. So I know that I'm not cutting any hair shorter as I get behind the ear and the head a little bit. So know that I'm coming straight out from the head pulling the guide to the new hair. See the guide right there through the hair and then I just slide. I'm gonna go overhead. You guys can see the last section here. Take a little bit of the old right here and I'm bringing guide over to the new hair. See my guide, grab my tri razor slide. That is the right hand side. It's a little bit concave in my opinion, in my mind but when you hold the hair out like this you can see how it gets short to long. So right there short to long and cut it just like that. So it's almost concave. I would say it's about this sort of angle. So to me I think of concave like when I'm cutting hair I think of concave as a collapsed shape or collapsed section of hair. To me this is concave. Some people say that you have to really kind of shift your elbow up and cut short to long this way. I guess it just depends on your thought process. For me it's a really nice just layered effect. So now we're gonna do the right side. You'll start to see those layers really come into life. Remember, I'm cutting this shorter. I don't care about the perimeter. That's why the perimeter looks less dense right now. And really what I'll do is I'll do it now so then that way you guys can really get a visual for it. So then once I cut my layers then it skinnies up the bottom and I can really decide now that I've got the layers where I want them now I can decide where I want that line to be. You can come in. I'm gonna cut where hair gets a little bit weaker. I wanna go just a half inch above the weak part of the hair to make it look strong. So we'll do a nice blunt line with our scissor. It'll be a nice balanced line in the back of the head. For me it's the combination of the creative freedom of the tri-raiser mixed with the precision of a scissor and that combination is just awesome. So now you can see, take a look at it. A lot of hair at once, real simple. Here's what we're gonna do. I'm gonna lift this up in the air. Again, not worried about that perimeter length. Was it your intention to use thin hair? Zelda, good question. Not really. I kind of take these mannequins as they are or I just put a thought on the haircut itself like just pretending that they have thin hair but this one actually does have pretty thin hair so it works out. This is a great thin hair haircut to work with because we're creating blunt lines. We're not taking out too much weight. You got a disconnection that's gonna fall over the top and then right here I'm gonna work a layering technique with the tri-raiser with some elevation. We're gonna create some layering around the face. So here's the thing, so when you cut with a razor, I'm gonna take this in half because I don't wanna put that much in my hand. So when you cut with a razor, the more you move your hand back and forth, the more layered you get. So as I grab the hair, the more I move this up and down, the more layered I'm gonna get. Like if I held it up and cut it with a scissor. You don't necessarily have to hold it up in the air. Just know that the more you move it, the more layered effect you get. So I'm gonna go here and I'm gonna move back and forth. Here, in and out, in and out. Just like this. This will give me a more layered effect. I'll grab the rest of the hair here. I've got my guide and I'm just gonna move back and forth and get a more layered effect. Here's the other thing that can come up. So take a look at this. So when you look at these layers, all the PC-ness around the face, but it doesn't just stop there. That's not the only spot where there's layers. The layers go all the way through, but start to get a little bit longer towards the back, which is our goal. When you bring everything forward and cut it here, it's shortest at this point and gets longer towards the back. So we're kind of filling in where that hair would get the weakest in fine hair. Let's just say somebody had thick hair that you were working with. A couple of little tricks that you could do as well. That's where the texturizing sides come in because as I'm pulling this hair up, if they had thick hair, I could start by going in with a texturizing side and take some of this texture out like that, push it, remove some of that weight, then re-comb and then start to slide through it. So you could really remove a bunch of weight from this haircut as well if you wanted. Now bring the rest of this hair up. There's my length. So I'll go 25, just take out a little bit of weight and then go 100 and pass through. Now we've got layers going on both sides. We've got layers going on in the back. Now we're going to go into the fringe. I'm going to do a shorter fringe on this one because I want to and I already filmed a video with a longer one. Should be coming out in the next day or so. So let's go a little shorter today. This is going to be more of a textured fringe. I'm going to go straight down the center, part it. Let's go to the side first. So nice little slight diagonal forward parting in the front. So now I have a little bit sectioned out of the front here. So now I don't want to take a section too much thicker than the blades that are on the razor. I'm going to pinch this just slightly into the middle, into the middle of the nose. And then that's where I'm going to start just kind of working a soft back and forth movement on the hair. That pinch of the hair pulls the hair together. When you pull the hair together, you get over direction. Now I've got a slight over direction into the fringe which gets longer on each side. And I'm going to continue to do that motion here. Grab another little triangle out of the front, this. I'm going to do the same thing on the opposite side. Same thing on the opposite side here. Just taking out a triangle again, make sure that that triangle looks pretty balanced before you clip it away. Then I bring these two pieces together right into the center. Make sure that you get all the hair from the scalp nice and tight. Then I have it here. I pinch it right in the middle in the same spot that I was. And then I come in right here and I work back and forth. Pinch the hair right into the middle. I just work slightly back and forth until you get through the hair. Now the more you pass back and forth, obviously the more shattered it gets. If you go too much, it'll layer it way too much. You can see how soft it's looking already. I know it's in their eyes. I want to leave it a little bit longer. I'll do a little bit of detail work when I dry it. People get mad at me because I leave them too long but I don't care. It's my thing. So we keep working through until we get to the end of that triangle section that we created at the very beginning of the cut. So I can see where these layers start the side of the haircut. Same thing on the opposite side. Finding that triangle right where the hairline is. If you go too far, so let's just bring this forward. If you go too far in the fringe area, pass this hairline right here. You're gonna end up with sideburns because you'll cut this hair short. You don't wanna do that. So make sure as we're cutting this fringe, section ends at that hairline. Now, bring it in here, pinching it together up here with the razor, just working those small. I'm not even barely pressing the razor in. If I press it too hard, it'll cut right away. I don't really want it to cut right away. I want that softness to kind of work on its own. So now when you look, take a look at that. A nice short to long soft fringe around the face. Now I can go in and do some detail with my scissors layer when I get it dry but to just go through a haircut and cut it is really creative and unbelievably fast. When we do such fringes techniques on curly hair too, absolutely, I will be doing a bunch of different videos to showcase how to do stuff on curly hair. It works really well. You guys saw the promo video. It cuts through curly hair just as well, just as fast. Now I've got this diamond shape. What I'm gonna do is I'm gonna split this diamond shape into four pieces. So here's one, separate that from now. So I'll go back to it. Now I'm gonna cut this into two. Yeah, if you guys are wondering where you can get the razor, if you go to shopfse.com, it's available pretty much worldwide. This point, go here, shopfse. So then I cut this section in half. Now I've got one, two, three, four sections. I'm gonna twist this one, flip it, two. And I'm gonna split this section here in half as well. So now I've got four triangles on the top crown area. You could cut this sides, very similar to this all the time, but then decide this can really change her haircut in general. These four pieces. You could either do short layering through it. You could do longer, could remove weight. You could keep the length quite a bit if you wanted to hold some longer hair around the haircut shape. So there's so many different options. For me today, I'm going to cut these pieces to go towards the front. I'm gonna over-direct them forward. And then actually, I'm gonna do something a little different. I'm just changing my mind. I'm gonna take these two sections. I'm gonna put them together. We're gonna do the same concept. So I'm gonna grab this hair here. I'm gonna pinch it in my hand, just like this. And then I'm gonna work just a little bit wider with the razor back out. I'm gonna work a little bit heavier strokes with the razor to create a more layered effect into the back. So we're gonna go just like this, and I'm just gonna work through that sec. That hair falls, but really it's gonna fall into the back and it's gonna be layered. Then I grab these two sections here, and I'm gonna bring them over top into the front of the head, but I'm not going to bring them as far forward. I'm gonna keep them a little more elevated. And I take my tri-raiser in front of the head, still going over top there, and I just work some more layers into it. All of that stuff is falling into the front. Now when you push it towards the back, so you guys can see, when you push it towards the back, you'll see the explosion layers that happens through it, which I love. Tons of texture, and the heaviest point of that top is now sitting here over top of that kind of that shape that we created at the very beginning in the back. The whole shape here, I wanna show you the layers first. So you can see one of the best things here, I think that we created today, is really just being able to take somebody that has finer hair, give her layers, quite a bit of layers, but still have it feel thick and full. So you can see through here, you have that layering. This is the stuff that came over top and we cut in the very front. So I like that. And then as you see on the sides, you know, skinny that up a little bit. We have this kind of backwards feeling off the face feel, which really opens up the face before they cut. Same thing on the opposite side. And then we did the fringe area, which to me could be a little bit shorter if you guys wanted it to be. Don't feel pressured obviously, depending on your client and how they like fringe. I like a little extra length in there, but that's pretty much it. All right guys, I hope you enjoyed the video. If you did hit that like button, share this video with your friends and also subscribe to us right here on YouTube and go to ShopFSC if you'd like to pre-order your tri-raiser right now or start shipping December 21st all over the world. So wherever you're at, go to ShopFSC.com and get your tri-raiser. Thank you guys so much for watching this video. Hope you liked it. Let me know if you have questions in the comments below. Thanks for watching.