 Alright guys, so I'm really excited to show you guys today's cut. I've been doing a haircut every single day. What I love about this whole entire experience so far is that it's pushing me to try new things constantly and just really getting really inspired. So I appreciate you guys watching every day and I hope you guys are enjoying all the haircuts that we've done. So today's haircut comes from Jennifer and she sent out a request and this was interesting because she said, can you do the Carly Rae Jepsen haircut from her latest appearance on Ellen DeGeneres. So I looked it up. Her haircut's really cool, really fun. So I'm going to show you guys my end result. This is what we came up with so we got our nice disconnection. I even colored this mannequin for you guys but I just love the choppiness of this. We used our razor, our Donald Scott razor. We used our scissors. We used over direction. We used disconnection. So this haircut's full of all kinds of cool stuff so I hope you guys like it. Make sure you post in the comments. Let me know what you think and I hope you guys enjoy watching this as much as I enjoyed doing it for you guys. Jennifer, thanks for the request. If you guys want to see a haircut, post it in the comments below. Mostly haircuts. Another thing was a struggle for me today but post what you want to see and I'll see if I can get it done for you guys. Here we go with our step by step cut. Alright so we're going to start off by sectioning parietal ridge down to a point just at low crown and then we're going to section off our disconnections that are going to happen in the side which is a nice square section from mid ear to the whole temple area. So just twisting that away. The sectioning really tells the story of the cut guys so when you're thinking about how you want to go about somebody's haircut, let's say it's a celebrity or whatever it is, just look at the cut, figure out each little aspect of it and then section off each part of the head. So all the disconnection happens on the side and in the back. So what I wanted to do was section off a rounded shape which I'll spin this and show you guys in a second but that goes right to the middle of our disconnected square. The reason I'm starting in the middle is so that I have a complete disconnection all the way around the outer perimeter of the haircut. So just sectioning away those sections. We're using our Donald Scott carving comb for the first part of this haircut. We're actually going to switch it up so I wanted to start off with the razor. We're going to start by creating those short layers. The way that we're going to do this is we go in cutting the short layers, big strokes with the razor and then we fade away and leave the length around the nape area. So starting off carving nice and short in, let's just say you're pretty much following the occipital bone area down to the nape, that angle when you first cut in and then just dropping out and leaving the length as you continue down. That length is going to be a little bit more extreme than we're going to leave it at the very end of the cut but I want to leave a little extra length. That gives me some freedom when I go in to do the dry cut layer. So you can see there's not much over direction in my cutting on the back part of this haircut. So everything's pretty much following the head shape coming straight out from the round of the head and just creating the layering. We're going to spray some of our prepare. This is our liquid tool glide. This is like the best thing that was ever invented for razor cutting because it allows the razor to just glide and slide through the hair, keeps the condition in the hair. So again, this is the same kind of feel we're following the round of the head. We really want to collapse the shape. That was the cool thing about this cut was that it's not a bob. It's nice and collapsed and shaggy looking. So we go in, cut those short layers, follow the round of the head and then this one we're not leaving the disconnection. We're actually connecting to the bottom that we already cut. So now we're going to work into the top. This is a fun technique because what I wanted to do was she has almost like a little faux hawk feel to the middle of her haircut. So what I wanted to do is add the weight. So I wanted to remove it from the sides and add it to the middle. So what I'm doing is I'm starting my guide off on the side of the right on the parietal ridge. So coming straight up off the parietal ridge. And then I'm going to over direct everything. I'm going to make that a stationary guide. I'm going to bring everything to that and just cut it. I'm cutting this blunt because she has more of a precision feel on the top of the head. So that's what I wanted to create. So she had more freedom and layers throughout the sides and the back. And then it was more precise on the top. And you know, even if that's not how they did her haircut, I think it's a cool way to do it. So just going through taking those sections, I'll go all the way across the whole Mohawk section and bring it over. So even though I'm going to, you know, I'm going to recut the right hand side. I definitely I like to over direct it, clean it all up. And then we'll do the same thing on the opposite side. So just bring everything over till you run out of hair. If your client has longer hair, you're not going to run out of hair. So you'll just finish it up just like this. And the story of this cut is really just following that head shape. So even at this point, I'm bringing everything straight up to that stationary guy, but I'm following the round of the head the whole time. You'll see a good angle of it here. Just bringing everything straight up from the parietal ridge over and recutting another guideline. Now our guideline starts from the back. So that's why you don't have to worry about the sides being the same length or anything like that. Now you're going to see me pushing away. That's me pushing now. So we pulled everything to the one side for the first cut. And now we're working on the opposite side of the head. So now I'm pushing everything over to above the parietal ridge. So it wasn't much to cut there. I bring out the disconnections. And now I'm going to work on the fringe. This is probably the key factor of this cut, making sure that you get the fringe right. I'm going to go back to the Donald Scott carving comb for this. It's a broken fringe. It has a little bit of a precise look to it. But as long as you stay small with the strokes on the razor, you'll get a slightly shattered fringe, but more of a precise look. Then we can chop into it later. So I'm connecting. So I cut the fringe using the 100% carved side of the carving comb. Then I go in and just connect that corner. I just kind of carve out that corner a little bit. Add a few pieces around the face. And we do the same thing on this side. What you're going to see me doing the most right now with the fringe is combing the hair to see exactly how it's going to fall. And then I'm sectioning it or imparting it to make the cut from there. I think it's really important not to over-direct too much, because the more you start really pulling hair and over-directing it, you're going to cut it where it's not going to live. And then you're not going to have the result that you want. So now what I'm going to do is I'm going to blow it dry. I know this looks extreme at this point. Don't leave me yet. The disconnections have not been cut. So it's definitely more extreme on the sides. We're going to do a flat wrap, and then we're going to iron. This is our brocato vibrostrate iron. And yeah, just going through, smoothing it out. I haven't even colored it yet, because I wanted to color it at the end when it has the least amount of hair. So we're going to go through. I want to cut a little bit of a concave layering in. This is connecting the razor cut. So connecting the razor cut to the scissor, just a real quick clean up there. And now I'm going to go through with my Donald Scott carving comb and work the fringe some more. We're going to use our 50% carveside. So this actually, this side of the carving comb only cuts 50% of the hair. So it allows you to get that broken up bang that you're looking for. So I just keep taking horizontal sections, slight diagonal forward as I work through the top fringe of the haircut. And then I'm just grabbing little pieces, 100% carveside, and just breaking it up. This is where you get that freedom of using a razor. Just going in there and deciding how much weight you want to remove for the specific look you're going for. OK, so now this is the fun part. This is where the whole haircut starts to come together. So we're going to work our disconnection. Yes, I'm cutting dry hair with a razor. We've conditioned the hair. I have a brand new blade. All of this is OK to do as long as your blade is nice and sharp. So I went through there, did a little backhand razor cutting, going through there, some more backhand razor cutting, just turning the razor so I'm not cutting a big chunk, not using the full horizontal blade. So just using little pieces of the blade, little pinch cutting in there, some more pinch cutting, and just going through 50% carveside. This is all artistic, guys. So just going through however you feel and creating that shape. I want to remove a little weight from this side. So I go in 50% carve and just clean it up. You can see those layers just pop. Razor point cutting that we do with the Donald Scott carving comb. Going through the top, removing weight. We created that weight line on the top by over directing each side to the parietal ridge. So now I'm just softening that weight line. So we're almost to our end result a couple more cutting things that we're going to do after the color processes. So right now I'm putting on a 2N from Vibra Color. And we're using a 10 volume developer. I just wanted to really match up the look. This haircut does not look the same on light brown hair. So this will be a nice black feel to the hair color. So we're going through. We're going to let that process. Don't diss me on my color technique. I did get color all over the mannequin. The amazing thing about Vibra Color is somehow it didn't stay in the mannequin. I don't know how that works. So we went through and put on our Bercato cream gel, which I really like. It's the hold on gel. I'm going through ironing the haircut again. So now a little bit of slide cutting. I want to piece out. This is something that you're not going to get quite with the razor. So I'm using my Mizutani DB20 scissor that I used for the entire haircut on dry hair. So a lot of people say, well, what's your favorite all-around scissor? The DB20 is definitely my favorite. It's a great investment because you can do dry cutting and wet cutting with it. So we're sliding in, half-closing the scissor, and just piecing out those disconnections a little bit more. And now going in deep point cutting into the back of the cut. And that's just to add, again, a little bit more separation in the nape of the neck. Now I want to open up that cheekbone area a little bit. I just think that that kind of gives a little pop to the cut. This is a brocado carve. I want to go through. It's a cream wax. So it doesn't have a ton of hold, but it's perfect for women's short hair because it does give enough hold to create that look. So you can see that the pieciness happening and the separation and the fringe. So there's our end result, guys. I hope you guys like this vlog. And thank you, again, to Jennifer for requesting this cut. If you guys want to request the cut, do it in the comments below. And definitely let me know your thoughts on this video. Thank you so much for watching. All right, guys. So I hope you enjoyed that haircut and the color. And make sure if you liked this video, hit the Like button. Hit the Share button. Share it with all of your friends out there. And make sure you leave a comment and let me know what you think because I love reading all of your comments. Definitely fuels the fire in making these videos every day. So thank you, guys, so much for the support and watching all the time. And I'll see you guys on the next video. Thanks.