Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Amanda McKenzie and Ten Minute Color/Color10

     


       Amanda McKenzie recently taught a class on Schwarzkopf's new line called Color10 which is a quick processing hair color that is perfect for clients who are in a hurry, book last minute, have short hair, or don't have the patience for long processing hair color.
      Some of Amanda's students had already been using the Color10 line before the class and one of the stylists said that many of her clients refuse to use anything else on their hair now. Since the color is only on for ten minutes the damage to the hair is greatly reduced, because of less exposure time to the chemical reaction that needs to take place for a change to occur in the color.
     The experience for the client is like this: The application of the color needs to be completed within ten minutes (this is why short hair or a hi-light mini are the perfect options when using this color), then the processing time lasts for 10-15 minutes depending on the how much gray coverage you need or if your hair has been colored before, etc. Finally, you are washed and toned at the bowl, this is to ensure that there is a consistency in the color from roots to ends - the hair is blown dry, styled and viola! The entire appointment runs about an hour. For those of us use to 1 1/2 to 2 hour long appointments for color, this new option is quite a thrill!
     Amanda needed a last minute color model so I got to be the guinea pig for this class. Here's the before and after:


Pretty big change, huh? Much needed!

Monday, August 26, 2013

Lion Makeup by Andrew Williams


The very talented Andrew Williams displays his cross-species transformation skills!

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Monday, August 5, 2013

Sharing is Caring: OSiS Hair Cocktails to Make You Swoon



OSiS Twin Curl + OSiS Buff

- apply OSiS Twin Curl to wet hair. Proceed to diffuse. Finish with OSiS Buff.

Results in a soft natural bouncy curl.

OSiS Hold Miracle + OSiS 4-Play


- gives ultra strong hold, shine, and great light texture and separation for

more textured cuts.  Also phenomenal for very coarse/wiry hair or hair that

is insanely curly and coarse. I will also add either a tiny drop of OSiS Magic or

BC Oil Potion Light Treatment.

OSiS Hold Miracle + OSiS Soft N' Straight

- strong hold (for the amazing summer humidity we have right now), smoothing,

and shine

OSiS Grip + OSiS Dust It

- For those fine haired women who claim their hair just "won't hold a curl"

- just a few shakes of dust it adds that extra grip

- also been known to add a shake of shine duster into the mix if wanting to add

shine

OSiS Soft N' Straight + OSiS 4Play

- great for extra smoothing and light separation on ends.

OSiS Thrill or OSiS Fiber Light + (1 Shake) OSiS Dust It

- nice separation on ends with more natural to matte finish.

- As well as adding more control/hold.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Rose Hecht Takes on Adorn's New Website!

(Above: Rose and Rebecca Hecht at the LAAFF. They worked together as vending coordinators for years in order to make LAAFF the amazing event that it was.)

Rose Hecht got her start as a photographer, she is the sister-in-law of Adorn’s owner, Rebecca Hecht. Rose’s creative intuition has landed her lots of creative jobs taking photographs and using her design skills. She lives in Asheville with her chihuahua, Jackie. In addition to photography and web development, she likes going out and dancing to Beyonce’ . Rose is probably one of the biggest self-starters I’ve ever met, she is always pursuing something new. We recently hired Rose to take on the arduous task of transforming our website that we are excited to launch in in the next few months! We hope you will be too! In the meantime, a little bit about our own creative genius, Rose A.K.A. ‘Ro-ro’ Hecht:

So tell me a little bit about what we’re going to do with Adorn’s new website:
I just want to give it a nice modern look. Revamp it, make it nice and clean, easier to maneuver for our customers and just be able to have the features and all the social media inputs that we use.

How did you get into Web Development?
I was always into photography. When I went to school for photography, I also started picking up the graphic side of things via photoshop and illustrator. I got really into that and through that kind of spawned moving into web and layout design. Then two Januarys ago, went back to school and started taking web classes and found that I really had an niche for it and really understood it.



You created the website for Biscuit Head, how did you get that gig?
Those are my friends. The chef and owner and his wife I worked with at the LAB when we opened there so, I’ve worked with them for three plus years now. We all work together really well and they needed somebody here that they could talk to and that understood what they were looking for and the kind of feel that they wanted and that’s where that came from.

Where do you see yourself going with this in the future?
Right now, I am working on three sites - two for downtown local businesses and one is for a band. Hopefully, I’m looking to use these as a nice start to my portfolio and starting to use my contacts to get my name out in Asheville and get people to use me.

What I’ve always admired is the confidence you have when you pitch yourself to people, what kind of advice do you have for others doing the same work as you?
You can always know more, there’s always far more you can learn. I mean, I don’t by any means tout myself as an expert or a pro, I know that I’m good at the stuff I know, but I’m also smart enough to know that there’s a whole other world of stuff in my field that I can learn. There’s always online forums, Linda.com classes, Adobe does professional certification classes... There’s all sorts of other avenues to take to continue to use that education and that’s the other thing, you do have to continue to educate yourself, because every year formats change, procedure changes, html language changes, so you really have to keep up with what’s happening in the field.
  I also did a lot of work for free and got to a place where I was comfortable asking to be paid for the work that I was doing because I had all this experience and was confident that my work was good.