 Hey guys, this is FSC live, we are here, we have Justin Scott doing a class, so we're going to introduce him in a second. We have Brian Hare, Dre Boland, Thaddeus Boland, and Christina Kevokanti. We're all here, we're going to be hanging out, doing hair, Justin why don't you start off and talk about what you're going to go over tonight and then we'll get into the show. Sure. Hey guys, this is going tonight. We have a lovely model, a nice mannequin here, I got him sectioned before the show. We're going to go ahead and do a thook, a thook for Christina. I've had a lot of gentlemen coming in lately and wanted to kind of get rid of the pompadour or the high and tight, they're trying to keep a little bit more hair down there, they're not going to be doing, you know, such high skin, you know, waiting for it. They're not going to keep it so tight around that neckline, a lot of guys want to see more of an actual neckline in there. So, we're going to go in, we're going to use a few different tools tonight. I'm going to start off with the Andis Supra to take out a ton of the bulk, because as you can see this mannequin has a ton of hair left on there. Then we're going to go and work the rest of the fade, it won't be too severe tonight with the Andis Master series. All of the work on top will be done with our visitonis, I'm going to go through and do some of the scissor comb work with the, there we go, the DB20s, that's 6.7 inch shears. And then we have the two-point, the two finger position blacksmith fit, five inch. And yeah, it's going to be a nice fun haircut tonight. I'm excited about this, kind of changed up a bit. A lot of the trends I've been seeing also going on for this year, a lot of people are saying the foe hawk's coming back and I've seen it in all age groups. So, I hope this helps anybody out. Please feel free to ask any questions. Heck yeah. So, I saw that, I don't personally use the single magnet guards, I use the old school two magnets, but on the new Supra you can actually put the single mags on there very comfortably. And this is a great little tip I found out because you can just go through with your 3-0 or your 0A and take out a ton of bulk real fast. This essentially is like your closed and this master series. That's about how short you're going to take that. So we're going to go ahead and get our foreguard on. Again, just take out our bulk, give us a nice clean area to work with. Foreguard. I'm excited, those are my, those are my guards. Your news? They're famous now. The new school single magnet, what's up? So, we're just going to go up. If this is a person I'd be using the other hand to stretch, we're going to come up and just scoop out. Did we go over sectioning already? I just said how I sectioned it, or sectioned it prior to the show. What I did is went around the parietal ridge from the temples up here. I'm sorry, the parietal ridge from the temples up here all the way down to the occipital and back around because that's where the bulk of the hair is going to stay. Want to keep spinning it, Matt? Wait, will you just show the back how you did it for your faux hawk? Sure. Like traditional faux hawk, it's not going to go all the way down like a mohawk would. So it's going to sometimes dip a little farther down, sometimes go up a little higher. What I've seen with a lot of the Jummen who are coming in here, they have that haircut that comes up super high. So I want to kind of work with that tonight. Is that a good angle? That should be good. Awesome. So again, just coming up, scooping out. If this is a real person also, I'd kind of be pinching that ear down so that way I can work around it, come that hair out of my way. And again, starting down here nice and slow, coming up and out. And again, the reason I like these, I'll just actually show you for comparison. They just, they cut right through so much bulk. So I'm going to take my Master Series now and do the same job I was doing with the Supras. And it cuts just a little slower. It still takes a little bulk out, but if you listen as we keep going back over that section, just a few of those little hairs left. Now what I'm looking to do right now, I'm trying to get myself a nice canvas to work with. Stretching. Some people prefer to use a brush when they're working on a male guest. I prefer to stick with combs more often than not. I never really got comfortable using brushes on people just because blood board pathogens spread very easily. If you kind of cut over a pimple or nick the back of their neck with something, you can spread things very easily from one person to another. I don't even realize it. Delicious. I hope just from fear, no experience. Again, up on the other side. Oh, we have someone from Costa Rica watching tonight. Oh, hope I don't disappoint. How bad do they want a balayage class? Let's go. It's actually, the full term for balayage is Brazilian balayage. The show just started and you're already out with them. So I just grabbed my Master Series and I grabbed my two guard. The blade completely open. So it's now into two and a half. I say open because the arm is all the way down, making it the longest cutting you can get. And you see if I drop that up, it gets shorter. So we're going to start with it a little longer. Wait, I have a question. Shoot. Why did you switch? Why did you use the other one for deep bulking and not just this one? The other one deep bulking I used just because I want to start with a nice flat, kind of easy area to work with. On those, you don't have the arm. So as we switch the purple guards of a one to a two on here, you can easily adjust that little arm to kind of blend out the line. With this you have no arm. Right, so I'm saying why don't you just deep bulk with the Master? Because those cut faster. The Master Series is a... We went over that, Brian. Yeah, the way the Master Series cuts, it cuts in one direction only. He compared both. I'll go back through it. They cut in one direction only. So if you ever notice, if you ever take some of you guys like a ton of thick coarse hair, like if you're cutting my hair, for instance, and you just went into it with this, notice kind of slows down a little bit. With those, since it's cutting in both directions, you're just going to fly right through it. Also, if you try to stop the blade with your thumb with these, you'll stop it in a heartbeat. Whereas with that, you're not stopping anything. You're so gutsy. So this one I'm going to go in with my two and a half guard. I'm just going to put in my shortest guide down here. Coming up and flicking out as I work my way up the back of that head. A lot of times people are coming in, they don't know exactly how short they want to go. I enjoy the two guard on the Master Series as a quick go-to for a lot of people because it's not too short. It's not too long. You can usually just go a hair shorter if you need to, especially if you're working around the nape area back of the head like I am right now just to give them a quick, you know, what do you think about this? Working up, flicking out as I work my way up. Again, like I've said before, if you notice while I stop to move the mannequin, if there's my guest to move the chair, I'm always turning the clippers off to let them run too long. They will get warm. They get a little more than warm. They get pretty hot. Yeah, they get pretty tight. I learned that when I gave you your first really tight fade. High and tight skin fade. So now I went and I grabbed my three. I'm going to close the blade. So it's a true three. It's not three and a half. I'm just going to see my line there. So now I'm just going to work between that and that. I'm just going to bring it up. That's the hair. So I'm working just small sections, trying to blend this out. And I'm opening it slightly as I work my way. Are you flicking out at all or are you just? The whole time as I work my way up the head, whether I'm taking the bulk out or I'm trying to blend a line, always want to flick out. If you don't, you're just coming straight in pulling the clip away from the head. You're going to create a really drastic line as a pain in the butt to take out. So I'm only working in one quadrant right now. Some people like to go side to side as they cut the hair. I like to worry about one little area and then work my way around. Now you see a nice angle. Actually that's pretty good. So if you're looking right there, it's very gradual as it works its way up. You can see back here. And that's going from the two to the three closed to the three open and then essentially the four closed, which I used to take out a lot of my bulk. Now if you come to this side, trying to see if I, oops, sorry, a little squirrely, trying to find a heavy weight line. It's tough on a mannequin. But there's actually a weight line right about there. You can see it now? Awesome. And that's without blended whatsoever. So we're going to go back in there and work it out like we did the other side. So again, I'm going to start closed. So I am the shortest three guard possible. And just work up and flick up. And again, even these guards are plastic. They're not metal like the other ones, or just the metal blade of this one. You want to make sure you're not going in too aggressive because they will still nick your client. They'll cut them. Or just not be comfortable. Yeah. Scratching. Hey, Justin. Hey, Brandon. I asked, I'm in the market for a new clipper. If I can only get one, which Andis, do you recommend getting? How long have they been cutting hair for? And are they comfortable using clippers? Because that's going to determine my answer. I just said get the masters. Well, the Andis Envy is a great set. It's the one Thad usually loves to go to. Yeah, I love that one. But the thing I've seen with the Envy setup is it doesn't cut as consistently close and blends as nice as I like the master series too. So if you're just getting started and you're not too experienced with clippers, I would say get the Envy's to kind of get used to them. A lot of people don't always turn them off in the middle so they won't get as warm as quick. But if you feel pretty comfortable cutting men's hair or just doing clipper cuts in general, these would be my go-to the Andis master series. Yeah, I like them. She said she was leaning towards masters. I would definitely get the masters. Again, now I'm opening it out. It's 11 years. Oh, so I think she's good. Now I'm going to open the three up all the way to make a three and a half. Just work a little bit of the sideburn area. Just take some of that bulk out. You don't want it to be too fluffy around there. And this is going to keep it pretty similar to where I had the rest of the fade around the head. Again, just to clean up the sideburn area a little bit. Now I'm going to go in with the Andis outliner here. Switch my combs up. And that's the trimmer that came in the envy set. Yes, this is the Andis. This is the outliner that came in the Andis envy set up. It has become one of my favorites. If you look, I've done a difference video before. The teeth are a little longer than your traditional outliners that come in the gray pair. They're both great outliners. They do fantastic jobs, but this just you get a little bit of a tighter cut with. Justin. Yes. Marissa has asked, would you suggest doing a guard shorter at the hairline in front by the ear so it doesn't grow out as fast for them? Hairline front by the ears. So the sideburn area? Yeah, like I'm guessing the white wall area, would you do a shorter guard around there? Depends on the look they want to have. Like I said, a lot of guys I'm seeing coming in are wanting it a little longer on the sides. They don't want that skin tight look that has been in the media for so long. So I would just say keep it symmetrical with what you're doing in the back. No, you're not going to cut a straight line around the head. When you do a fade, you're using points of reference along the face I went over in previous videos. So you're always going at a tilted angle. So whatever you're using around the sideburn, you're usually going to be using behind the ear around that nape area or the back of the neck. When you're cutting around the ear, I like to use the ear as a reference point. Of course, I bend it down to get behind it. But if they want that kind of longer textured beaver haircut where it kind of sits around the ear, a real fun technique I like to do is actually use the ear as something to cut on. So I lay the hair on top of it, and I just tap it, and then I see how it's going to sit around that ear area. So you don't have to worry about giving somebody their style of white wall. You can still kind of cut around the ear as well without having to worry about cutting it. Otherwise, I just kind of go around it, keep the natural shape. I got two more questions. Shoot. One, I think even I might be able to answer. Stani's having an issue with the adjustment lever on my clippers sliding from all the way open to all the way closed, especially when I cut the top with a guard. Okay. I tried holding the lever. That was awkward. What would you suggest? You must take your clippers apart to fix that. It's a very simple solution, actually. I'm going to get to that in one second. Also, after I'm done cutting with the clippers, I like to take my comb and my edger and just clean up the sideburns a little bit by selling the taper amount. Again, coming out at an angle, she's in that head shape. If you want kind of a softer look. I'm sorry, back to the question, though. If you take the cutting blade off, it's two Phillips head screws, and then when you take the cutting blade off, behind it... It's a wall sterling for that matters. It's usually the same setup, I believe, where if you take the... I'll show you. If you take this off, behind it, you'll see four tiny screws, two here and two here. That controls the lever. If you just tighten them a fraction of a turn, you can see how tight or loose this is going to be before you even put this on. That's a quick fix for you. Excellent. And then, Samuel, ask, can you fade with the metal blades alone? I have the Oscar set... Oscar. Oster 76 with no way to open the blade or close it besides using the staple blades. Will the blades fade into themselves without closing or opening, or should I just buy a masters? It's a tricky procedure. Before I ever got a master series, I was doing a lot of clipper over comb work where I was using the comb against the head and that was giving my fade. Also, if you have the complete set for that clipper setup, you can do a fade. It just takes a little bit more work. It takes more, and it's expensive. I just came off of Oster. If you want to grab them, they're up top there. It's the entire setup. I don't. I... Yeah, no, it's good, but there's so many steps in between. You've got the A, the half, the three-quarter, and you can do it. I would say speed-wise, if you're in a shop where you need that kind of... You know, let me just get in now. Definitely pick up a master series or an NB, a clipper with guards that are detachable. That way it'll make it a little easier for you to work with. Do you want to get the Oster? That's essentially the whole set. Some of them are doubled in there. The first comb I was using was the YS Park 209. I believe? Yeah, 209 by YS Park. And now I am at a... What's this one, Matt? You know this one by heart? I love the blueberry, by the way. 339. It's the shorter one. It's a regular comb size, but it's a YS Park and it's fantastic. Yes! That's why Samuel called it... that it was a 339. He knows his thumbs. So now what we're doing is we're letting down all the top locks. Usually this in itself is a men's haircut nowadays. It's essentially a shorter version of what I have. But he wants to get rid of all this. Manny Manny Kim does not want to deal with it all. So, a quick... one of my favorite tips for dealing with this and taking out some of this bulk and blending it nice is using the head shape and over direction. So I'm going to go back just because I don't use these a lot and I like using them, so... I sell my foreguard on, which is the longest we use on the sides here. That's the foreguard. So I'm going to comb all this hair over just to be able to still see what I'm working with. I'm going to use my comb as a... essentially just to hold the hair there right where that head bends in where I kept my line. I'm going to grab it. I'm going to come straight up. Same thing. Straight up. I'm going to comb all this hair from one side where it would normally lay. I'm going to leave that front out because we're not sure how long we want to make it or short. Which ones are those again? This is the Andes Supra ZRs. These are the rechargeable cordless pair of amazingness that we've loved here. Again, combing everything over directed from one side to the other and doing the same thing on the other side. How's that, Matt? Can you see over there? One thing I'm going to do that I wouldn't recommend using a master series and water but the Supra ZRs, any pair of clippers like those can cut through wet, damp hair very easy. They have a lot more powerful motor to the clippers. So they're not really going to get jammed up as fast. And this is just because this mannequin has a little bit of a hard part. Question. Answer. The Supra ZRs. How do those compare to the Oster Octane? I've never used the Oster Octane. So there you go. They don't. So I cannot compare them. So I'm just going to double check the length of this hair real quick because it is damp and we all know that damp hair stretches a little bit longer than dry hair. Is it true that the master, Fade Master and Fat Master are a good trio? I've never used a Fat Master The Fade Master is a great clipper. Just be very careful of the clipper. They are very dangerous. We've used them in here. It's not a daily thing. I'm taking each one of those. Those are the ones that have the blade that comes literally to a razor's edge. Nope. That's a clipper that you really want to be very weary of, very cautious with using because if a gentleman or a lady sitting in your chair has larger hair follicles you will get that blade caught in them and they will... Fade has larger hair follicles on his head and when we were using it on him once it kind of almost... I noticed that as I was going I had to pull back and stop. This isn't a good idea. So... Right under that head bend we're coming up and taking that bulk out. Throwing that hair right out of the way. Fade, what's your favorite pair of clippers? I'd have to go with that envy box set. I'd have to have a little bit less hair underneath the blade and in the body which requires less maintenance. How about you, Matt? Favorite clipper? Like the basketball team? I like the both of them that you're using now. Those are your go-to? Yeah. So I took up most of my weight. Now the reason I combed it all from one side to the other is it makes it real easy again it's a mannequin so it's pretty tough to see but a little bit of water will help. As you notice there's not a super heavy weight line between this and this. We comb this, grab it with the comb let me know if you want to zoom in. If you grab it with the comb you'll see that over direction did most of your job for you. So you went from your clipper your longest clipper guard, your four that you started with all the way up here to the head now it's already starting to blend in. So you've already brought your guide up from the sides to the top. A big problem I see a lot of people having is a lot of disconnection where it doesn't look smooth and nice and comfortable. It looks very hard where this is very heavy and this is very thin here so that's a great way to kind of start that for you. Now, grab some scissors do some scissor work. We're not sure how long we want to leave the top, the front. It's one of those things where you just take more off if you need to down for a second and we're going to just work our way up to the top. So I'm going to grab this hair from the front and again follow my guide that I made again bring it back, grab another section see my guide. What I've noticed also a lot with this is if the guest has been your guest in your chair they've already been educated I hope so they know the best way to style their hair a lot of new guests coming in getting this hair cut just going to bring them to the other side aren't educated so you want to make sure you're explaining them the best way to style it because they're still throwing their product in on saturated hair. A lot of products the best way they're going to give you that nice strong hold, that nice matte finish is when they're very very dry maybe a little dampness to them. I know products like material you need that little bit of water to kind of control them whereas products like Layrite or Ruzel or Swabacito you want to have them on a drier scale so you get that much better control. Here pin drop in here Say some Believe it or not I have nothing to say for once. Tri-Fat is pretty sweet. Tri-Fat is super sweet. So you talked about the difference between the masters and the fade masters. What's the difference between the masters and the fade masters? I've never used them so I've been here. No one even know what they look like. I was trying to look up some information. So now typical faux hawk kind of where it pushed up to the front. A lot of guys they don't want all the commitment so this is why I try to kind of leave a little bit longer in the front. They want to do something different styled with it but this guy is kind of short. Question. If you had gone shorter on the sides like say a 2 instead of a 4 up at the top would you still be blending the top the same way? It would just be a shorter end result. It would just be a shorter end result right around this region because this is what's going to give you that nice blend right here where the sides blend into the top. If you have it too bulky and too full it's going to look very uncomfortable. It's going to be a pain in the butt to style and it won't give them that nice clean end result. Yeah. Yeah because essentially the client was doing the high and tight skin fade or they were doing like a very low taper like a brook and a lot of guys just decided they want to grow their hair out because that was a thing and now this is what they're moving into. A lot of faux hawks are coming in. Nicole on Instagram has asked how do you get comfortable around the ears because I swear my guys are going to be leaving earless every time. I get so nervous. It's just again a comfort thing. That little trick using an edger going around the ear with a comb with a little great tool so you would essentially hold the comb right over the ear. Go over it or you would comb the hair on top of the ear and just tap it there. What I use is using the thumb of whatever hand you're not cutting with to hold it down and then go with the other tool. Or if you get very clean very precise just you know only one part of your blade is cutting make sure that's not the side sitting right on top of the skin. Ooh, nice and nervous. So many ears. Because unlike the mannequin this is the part of the haircut that kind of makes or breaks how they're going to style it depending on their texture of hair how much texture you put into the cut. Now I'm just using my fingers essentially as a guideline I'm going in and I'm cutting as I come up. Creatives by JC asked do you have a preference on how you finish the back of the neck squared off rounded or faded? I partially what the client wants partially what I think is going to look best on them. They don't see the back of their neck all the time so they don't know how it looks best. Guys will come in and ask for it to be rounded when it doesn't need to be rounded. It should really be squared out. And vice versa. And it also depends on the haircut. If they want a 2 on the sides or a 3 on the sides or 4 on the sides I'm not going to bring it all the way down to skin around the neck area because it kind of looks weird sometimes. So I base it fully on the guest it's not a very easy this is end result. So the short answer would be whatever is going to look best on your guest. With your guest and their hairline. Dad did you just shorten that answer? Yup. Take note. See what happens when you leave the table? If that gets so much more confidence. He's like so if I could shorten that answer. That just means we put you up in front of a camera and you get the wordy one. Yeah it happens. Same thing with the region around here as well. What does every guest have? At least one of. I always tend to leave this a little longer if I'm taking a ton of weight out while it's damp to see how it's going to look while it's dry because my motto is I can always take more off. Rather as you go in super short with this they're sticking straight up. I'm going to go through now. I'm just going to dry it real quick. I'm going to see how this looks dry and then I'm trying to push these sides. I'm using the heat to direct the hair forward. When I come up in the middle I'm going to grab that hair and kind of direct it where I wanted to. Bringing that heat from the front and the sides. They can hear Justin. I didn't know how clear it was going to be. And from the front up here. Brian do you want to do a couple questions from Instagram while he's styling? Yes. Alright first one we've got Glen Demo Campo 1 If I have to leave the salon I'm at is it ethical to let my clients know that I will no longer be there and where I will be? I say yes because that's exactly what I did so it worked out well for me. I don't think it's unethical. I think if you're worried about ethics then maybe don't be like hey come see me there. Like I left and I was coming here I assumed that since I was going an hour away I would just be like well if you're ever in New Hope walking around on the street pop in and say hi to me which is my way of saying this is where I'll be. Don't go into the computer and steal their information and then call them afterwards. I would agree with that. I'll just allow you to have left. No I'm saying like ethically you can't legally go in and steal the information from the computer but this day and age everybody's got Facebook everyone can find you so if they want to come with you they're gonna if they love a salon then they'll stay there. But don't go take stuff out of a computer because that's stealing so just be definitely I think the ethics comes in and contacting them outside of them sitting in your chair that's what I think is the gray area of not okay. I stayed at my old salon and it was so that I could either be like you need to go with the stylist or this is where I'll be. I stayed here for a month before you left so you saw a lot of people before you left. I was gonna say I know a lot of people well Brian you have a lot of your guests who follow you on social media so I was gonna say a lot of people but I knew a stylist who on the back of her business card wrote her email address so that if anybody had any questions or concerns they could contact her directly that also opened up for if she ever left the salon they had a way to contact her without giving out her personal cell phone number. Right yeah I mean I'm not a big I'm not a big fan of people personally contacting me for anything so like so for me but I think this day and age like everyone also is a lot of people are working independently if you're working in a salon and you're planning on leaving like if you don't think it's ethical it probably isn't so just telling them come to you. Yeah that's it real quick I'm just gonna go through now with the Acrowide cutting scissor this is a dry cutting tool I'm actually excited because I'm gonna be very truthful here because I want to be ethical as well this is the first time Justin's used this scissor so I really want to hear I thought you were gonna say this is the first time you've seen a scissor being used I was gonna be shocked well no it's my scissor I know that Justin has a scissor that he brought to the salon which I don't know where you got it somebody eye on a Harley everyone in New Jersey got a scissor from a guy on a Harley but but the scissor you've never used it's my scissor so I want to get your reaction from it as you're using it I mean if you ride a Harley he's got to know about scissors well real quick when I blue dry this mannequin it's like exactly what I wanted to you'll notice that it blends real soft from here up till here and all that hair flowing forward this is no product this isn't a blow dry serum this isn't a conditioning product this is literally the mannequin that was shampooed in blue dry prior to the cut and now it's sitting pretty pretty solid to how I want it to with all that over direction I don't want to I don't really need to diffuse any lines around the sides too much I just kind of want to take out a little bit of bulk we have up top hi okay cool let's see how this guy goes I like it next good well that's better than uh oh whoops alright next one I think this will be a fun one are there any tools or methods that are being heavily used by professionals lately that you don't necessarily agree with or find very professional in practice or appearance Matt you start you said it's a fun one you have one so talk about it he wants to build it up so he's like I got the best one oh no mine's not the best one but you have one though I don't know yeah I don't have one I don't know if they're still around but the only product that I've ever seen that I really had like a pet peeve with was the smoothing irons or curling irons that did the that had the steam or that advertised that they were wet to dry yeah just because that's like bad for the hair and they're advertising that's okay yeah that's yeah so like that'd be the only thing that I could really think of um I just want to say I love these if they disappear like you know Justin doesn't have those tomorrow actually I did okay so I got an email um this week and there was a guy who was talking about a leveler for a comb right we talked about this too no what was funny is you guys we were talking about the old school flat topper with the leveler and I actually so I had a guy reach out to me that and it's super cool like I'm for anybody that wants to invent something and actually work hard at putting it out he has a great website and stuff no but the um but so it's just one of those things where I don't think a leveling system because for me like when you look at like we're not on a level floor right now no like you drop something it's going to go to the other side so if you were to have a leveler installed on anything a flat topper or whatever the floor isn't level so if you cut a haircut level while somebody is not sitting level yeah now it's not going to level so I would just say to people out there just be super level when you're here you're holding it and moving it until it's level it's level but it's level yeah but if they're sitting cockeyed if they're not sitting level because the chairs are sometimes not perfectly level yeah like our chairs sitting on a floor like this but you cut it perfectly flat like this then it's perfectly flat like this till I stand up yeah does that make sense it makes sense what you're saying I don't think that's right oh no it's absolutely right well before we continue about everything we hate I'm going to style this real quick oh wait did you just stop a conversation about hate yeah weird who are you I get behind the camera I'm using two products tonight the one is lay right cement it is a really fantastic like strong hold paste putty love this stuff because it is water soluble that's a big thing for me with the products I kind of educate my guests on and the other one I'm going to use for just a little bit of shine and it smells fantastic is the lay right original upside down mix these guys together it's got a strong hold to it oh I thought you were making fun of me no I'm it's got a really strong hold with the putty the cement and the original has a nice shine to it but it doesn't have the strongest hold that's why I added a little bit of the original to it to kind of give a little bit of shine to this hair cut the super hold is a brown container of the same product it has a stronger hold than the original does but it doesn't have the hold of the the matte kind of hold of the cement it's this memory I used to actually pop my hair when I came to work that's what I used to use my hair every day and it held my hair up for eight hours yeah but yeah and that is our finished faux hawk for tonight so suave fantastic Justin and again it's one of those things not to the skin it's not a tight taper it's clean you know a kid can get this hair cut very easily because you know kids don't sit that well for extended period of time yeah and that's it any questions? you liked about what you did I was confused by what you did for one second and then I understood it right after that so you combed everything on the top to one side cut it with a clipper right yeah so I think what people could take from that is it was almost like you were creating what your guideline would be because the over direction came from one side you cut it and then so that built that triangle shape on the top or that kind of the longest point in the center and then you went through with your scissors and actually cut what you were cutting yeah so it's two steps but you're quickly creating a guide then going through and fine tuning that whole thing yeah it's not like you're sitting there and you're trying to take care that's out to here trying to be comfortable with that it's a real quick one two step yep so I like that what'd you like guys I was gonna say I really liked that whole like over direction thing because it removes so much bulk so quickly and you can do that with a scissor too yeah yeah that it was just so simple and I feel like for a lot of kids who come in with really overgrown haircuts it's gonna be a really fast turnaround for them and I didn't show it too much but when you're working on the back again that's one of those sections I tend to leave a little longer I'll over direct it instead of going completely sideways over here I'll kind of comb it forward a little bit so you have that little bit more bulk back here to work with and again same question you can take that two guard up to here and push it all over because that's still gonna blended all in right here where you want it to and he's back and I'm done alright so we have to spin the wheel I'm excited so okay okay Christine's got it over yeah I'm gonna crawl on it or I can spin it for you I'm right here yeah Justin why don't you spin it did you take your pre-workout before you're gonna spin it we'll see it next Wednesday the wheel stops spinning in two wheels so we're gonna go with sheer adoration yes so so real quick we have a new sponsor on the wheel which is vibra straight created that logo it actually looks like a pokemon symbol so that is their logo but I did it with a marker so it's a little off but it looks good enough so vibra straight we have which is the iron I've been using in all the vlog videos amika awesome tools have supported the show for a long time given out prizes, Oleplex we love Oleplex I mean Brian just did a video and talked all about it as well these are tiny scissors we're still giving away a scissor MinervaBeauty.com furniture free or salon every piece of furniture you see in here came from Minerva yes free salon education is giving away a cool little FSE gift basket thing let's just say collection of stuff it might not come in a basket donald scott carving comb, sun lights, balayage a balay box Jay Lace is some clothing we got some cool clothing the image that we used for our our little thing for the show is a Jay Lace hat parka razors justin is actually ordering I know I'm ordering a ton of those I got some barber friends nice and then ergo brushes check out ergo brushes on free salon education.com also that is it who's spinning I said it already share adoration share adoration email contestatfreesaloneducation.com your address and all your info with whatever prize you get here alright dryah sweet alright love it alright perfect so email us contestatfreesaloneducation will get your info to sunlights and you'll get your balay box in the mail alright what are we doing next week Matt I don't know what we're doing next week what are we doing every week Pinky trying to take over the world alright Thad do you want to close this out this is free salon education coming at you from youtube follow us on facebook instagram twitter snapchat anything social media free salon education what happens