 some fine hair thoughts before we start cutting. This point up, it doesn't really look weak. It's really from the neck down, or the shoulder point down, where this is a little bit weaker. So I would look at and assess where the hair starts to get a little less dense, a little weaker towards the ends, and then that's where I wanna base my haircut. I'm gonna do this dry today because I wanna be able to see the density as I'm working. I'm gonna do the sectioning and then I'm gonna break it down over on the board. Basically going from recession point back to the occipital bone, and I'm gonna draw a curved line from this point back to the occipital bone. So right here, comb the hair in the direction I wanna take it, and then I draw a curved line back. It's like that. I'll hold the rest of the hair in my hand. Now we're gonna come across the occipital bone. And then I'm going to draw a line on the opposite side and meet. So now as I comb it up in the air, I'm just looking for balance on both sides. So I wanna make sure that both of these sides match up. Twist it, clip it away. Now I'm gonna go through and just assess the bottom. You're gonna have more density in this area than you are in the ends because some of this hair is already just growing back from breaking through blow drying, ironing, all that stuff. Just kinda meeting it up with the hair that has broken off a little bit. That's just gonna give you more density. Number one is to get it to a length where your hair likes to stay dense. I'm gonna say this is about shoulder length is a good length for somebody with fine hair or go shorter. But going longer is just, your hair is just not gonna look as full. I'm gonna add a little bit of neuro protect to this bottom section and I'm gonna iron over it just to smooth it out because I'm gonna cut a nice baseline to begin with. I've got the hair smoothed out and we're gonna cut one length. We sectioned off this disconnection. That's what we're dealing with right now. So what we're gonna do with all of this hair underneath, we're gonna pull that hair straight down and cut it blunt at the length that we want it. What that's gonna do is it's gonna keep all of the density at that length and we're gonna cut our line. We also wanna add layers to this fine hair to create some movement but I don't wanna take away and layer all of it. Cutting at one length is gonna keep it full and then we'll start layering the top. I'm gonna do all the top is gonna be brought straight up cut into kind of a square layer on the top of the head. I'm gonna use a wider tooth comb because I'm cutting it dry and I don't wanna hold too much tension on the hair. I really just wanna comb it down to control it. You can't see really anything from this point over. But then when you get here, you really start to see through the hair and even more at this point. So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna hold the comb down, wide teeth right here and I'm gonna go through and I'm gonna cut my blunt line on the bottom. Look how full this looks compared to how weak this looks right here. That's gonna give you a much fuller effect in fine hair and then you can go through and you can obviously give this a little wand, iron to build it up but it's gonna have it nice and thick. If I were to elevate that part of the head, what's gonna happen is it would lighten up the ends. It would make it feel way less full. So here we go, moving around the head. I'm shifting over into the corner. I'm gonna cut a round line around the head shape. There we go, nice blunt feel to the haircut. Not worried about total outcome of that yet because I'm gonna go through and do the rest of the cut and then I'll work that perimeter even more. So now we've got our length cut. I'm gonna go through and work the top section. I'm gonna let this down for now and you'll see it kind of come over everything. You'll see that that's hitting right where that density I was talking about. So where it gets a little bit thinner. So what I'm gonna do, I'm gonna comb this into a couple sections. So here's the parting part right there and then I'm gonna find what splits the front and back. So right here, down to the hairline. This is kind of the hair that it's going to sit in the back of the head. I'll clip the rest of this away. I'm gonna do the same thing on the opposite side over here. What I'm gonna do is I'm gonna take this and I'm gonna elevate it up. So I'm gonna stand on the left hand side of the head, vertical section, straight down the center back. I'm gonna bring this up. Now my guide, I will see kind of from the bottom. You can decide, do you wanna cut at that guideline here or do you wanna go a little bit past it? You go past it, it's gonna push hair below the perimeter line. That's okay. You can always go in and point cut that or cut it blunt at the end. And that's what I'm gonna choose to do because I wanna push a little extra weight to the bottom. So here we go up like that, the guideline falls out and now I'm gonna go in and I'm gonna point cut through the hair. Take a look when you take away these pieces. How full the back of this looks. It's got that fullness to it. And that's the same thing I wanna do on both sides. This side now, I'm gonna bring it up to the center. Guideline falls out. Now what's happening when I pull this hair up and to the center, it's over directing. When we over direct, it pushes weight away from where we're pulling it to. So if I'm pulling it towards my body, it's gonna push the most weight away from my body. So right here, bring this hair up, cut your line and you can see how this starts to build a really nice kind of lob shaped. One of the things I like to do with point cutting is point towards your body and back at your body. Towards your body, back at your body and that's how you cut. You don't wanna come this way, lifting your elbow up and cutting into it because look what happens. As I cut into it, that blade is attacking my finger. If I shift it like this, my elbow goes down, so I'm more comfortable and then the blade that's coming out my finger is being blocked by a steady blade. If you wanna cut a precise line when point cutting, you're gonna go in and come at more of an angle and you can work that precise line. The more of an angle it gets more T to the section, this is gonna take out very little weight. Like this, I'm not taking out any hair. If I wanna remove, this takes out quite a bit of hair. Draw your line across and then just come directly in like this and soften that line. I'm gonna take my gas, I'm gonna tell her to tilt her head just slightly towards me, like this in the chair. I'm gonna come over here, I'm gonna grab all of this hair. I'm gonna lift it up over her head and I can see the guideline start to fall out. So when I start seeing that and I can see it kind of through here and see my guide from the rest, I can go through, lift it up and point cut my length across. Now we're gonna do the same thing on the opposite side. So now we've got a nice medium length haircut that has a really solid foundation in the base area here but then the layers that just fall over top of it that have a ton of movement because of the point cutting. Now what I wanna do is I wanna go through here in this area right here and I want to kind of fine tune it just by bringing this hair down and cutting into with a point cut technique a little bit of that baseline of the hair. Calm down, wide teeth through the hair and I'm just going to soften that line around the perimeter. So she parts over to this side here so she's gonna have a little bit different lengths because one side has this much hair and the other side has this much hair. But I can see my guide right through there and that's what I'm aiming for. I just wanna be a little organic with the way that I pull these pieces out and then I'm just gonna softly bring it around the iron and I wanna put it in kind of a ribbon motion. So not putting it all together. What I mean by don't just kind of clump it all together is take a section and wrap it kind of on top of itself like this unless you're looking for tighter curls. If you're just looking to add a little bit of wave to the hair, in turn, we'll create some fullness. I'm not leaving the hair in it too long. For one, I don't wanna create damage. Two, don't need to. I'm just creating a soft kind of defined wave in the hair. So you can see kind of the blunt edge of it how it really kind of works through allowing the fullness on the bottom. But tons of movement throughout the rest. So if somebody had even finer hair than this, then what I would say is go through it and just don't elevate these layers as much. So don't pull them straight up to the ceiling. Pull them out like here and then build the weight off of that perimeter line and then you'd have a full feeling throughout here. You wouldn't have these shorter pieces within the cut. So that would give it even more fullness as you kind of work through it. So that's it. Thank you so much for watching. I'll see you in the next video. Bye.