I think that the most important thing a woman can have - next to talent, of course - is her hairdresser.
Like a therapist hairdressers are in a position of trust. We are transforming not just how a person looks but how they feel.
A hairdresser holds a trusted place in a woman's life
When people ask how have I kept on top, I have to say with the help of every photographer, make-up artist and hairdresser I've ever worked with.
Hairdressers are a wonderful breed. You work one-on-one with another human being and the object is to make them feel so much better and to look at themselves with a twinkle in their eye.
Talking to your hairdresser is almost like talking to your therapist.
Hairdressers are professional gossips; when only the hands are busy, the tongue is seldom still.
To be a good hairdresser, you have to understand what the vision is of the designer or the photographer and then sort of add your thing.
Be nice to your hairstylist. It's an instant gratification! It doesn't matter how badly their day has gone, in that moment they feel amazing. And the hairdresser has made them feel that way.
All a woman needs is a good bath, clean clothes, and for her hair to be combed. These things she can do herself. I very seldom go to the hairdresser, but when I do, I just marvel.
I love a lot of things, and I'm pretty much obsessive about most things I do, whether it be gardening, or architecture, or music. I'd be an obsessive hairdresser.
I just let my hair go - if there's no hairdresser around I really can't be bothered!
It's an ill will that blows when you leave the hairdresser.
My hairdresser and I found ourselves shopping at Bloomingdale's with nothing to do for days.
Gordon Nelson is not only my friend, he's my mentor. He is a master craftsman with unique experience, and an approach to creativity that we can all learn from. For any hairdresser looking for enlightenment, look no further than a man who worked at the original Vidal Sassoon Salon, and who continues to strive for innovation in the industry.
I asked my hairdresser what would look good on me. She says a Los Angeles Rams football helmet.
Ninety-nine percent of everyday things are things we don't need - that goes for regular visits to the hairdresser just as it does for clothing. What would it mean if we all consumed 20 percent less? It would be catastrophic. It would mean 20 percent less jobs, 20 percent less taxes, 20 percent less money for schools, doctors, roads. The global economy would collapse.
I don’t like water. I drink Diet Coke. Nor do I smoke, or drink alcohol or even sip a café. I don’t look after myself. I don’t do yoga, Pilates, those things. I hate physical effort, I don’t run anywhere, but I am super-energetic. Make-up? I just black my eyes and that’s it. My hair? I get it cut on set (fashion shoots), I never go to a hairdresser. I’m not sure I’m French. You think I’m not smart enough?
Girls are always getting mad at each other and they tell their hairdresser to purposely mess up another girl's hair.
Losing love is so rich a philosophical ordeal that it makes a hairdresser into a rival of Socrates.
I was stuck with looking like a girl. As soon as I got out of music it was straight off to the hairdressers.
I haven't had any bad jobs. I was a hairdresser before and that's it. I still cut my family and mates' hair when they want a trim. If I go up to Scotland to see my mum, I know she'll say, 'Bring your scissors!'
I used to be a hairdresser.
I certainly think that when I flick through all the magazines at the hairdresser's I like to see and am drawn to images that have an intelligence and mind at work behind them.
A hairdresser who did my hair said, "You, my darling, have something that we call successful' hair," which is basically battered hair that's split and falling out in the back because you've had to blow-dry it every day. I don't want my hair falling out, so I wear wigs!
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