Regal Gentleman was born after a bad haircut experience, where one side of our founders head was left completely uncut (yes, really!). At this point we went to visit higher end barbershops and realised that men's grooming was overcomplicated, we weren't being educated as men in an easy to understand way and no one was doing customer service right online. We wanted to bring simple and relatable education to men's grooming, make products that the modern day gentleman had a hand in creating and bring the personal customer service that you'd expect from a local corner shop to the online world.
Straight out of 1983! I remember it well , super ‘ poodle ‘effect, curly on top and cut into the back ,super short at the back! I was 13 and the boys were all wearing it , needing PERMS most of them ! Super funny !
Haven’t seen any posts from you for a while. Been in the UK for six weeks and would have loved to call by and say hello but sadly didn’t make it. Off home to Australia on Tuesday so I will have to be satisfied with seeing you on the net.
I like the way you do a haircut taking into account all aspects, face shape, hair texture, the way it grows and lays on the head. My Brother is a big fan of Peaky Blinders and goes for this severe haircut with a side parting. I have not the heart to tell him, he looks like hitler, it just does not suit him.
I don't think the young fella looks too happy at the end, but might just take a while to get used to the new look. I'd like to see what happened 6 months down----, RG, should do follow-up's..
I went through “fitting in” during my junior high school days. Uncurl was popular, and the Beatles were the thing. I wanted long straight hair, however my hair was naturally curly and just didn’t go the way I wanted…my Mom always said pixie cut, which I hated. Now at 71, my hair is short and curly and gray, a grandma pixie…
No long hair! You're so handsome! GQ good-looking. Masculine. I don't like guys with long hair. It's divisive too. Women either love long hair or hate it. I love your short hair. Marry me! ♥
I understand the desire for a combover, based on insecurity, even shame, about hair loss. But it never fools anyone and just screams low self-esteem. My hairline started receding at 16 and my first short haircut was at 21 and I loved it. I hadn’t been doing a combover, I just wanted longer hair. My hair was curly so a combover wouldn’t have been possible anyway. I’ve kept my hair short as the years have gone by and I’m glad. The top is now more frizzy rather than curly when a little longer (at most half an inch). If I grew it longer and combed it over I’d feel pathetic. Do I wish I a head full of thick wavy hair? Of course. Who wouldn’t? But that’s not my destiny, and that’s fine. I’d probably keep a buzzcut anyway-super easy to take care of and no money wasted on combs!