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in Beauty:

Shorn for the Summer … Barbershops in North Brooklyn (Hairari, Barber Bart’s, Cocoro)

July 21, 2014 By Jon Reiss Leave a Comment

Screen Shot 2014-07-21 at 7.20.03 PM Screen Shot 2014-07-21 at 7.19.54 PM Screen Shot 2014-07-21 at 7.19.45 PM

Most people probably don’t know that one of the downsides of being a full-time writer is that you don’t often get to splurge on haircuts. Myself and writer friends can go for an incredibly long stretch between haircuts. I’ve gone as long as six months without a trim. Otherwise, we find some strange solution to the problem: we convince a friend with good motor skills to learn how to cut hair, we barter with our local barber (most barbers don’t accept poetry as payment), or we figure out how to look good with long hair.

I came up with something better. You’re reading it. A well-snipped summer haircut will not only make you look good, it will make you feel good. The feeling of having the back of your head and the sides freshly sheared and newly exposed to crisp warm air can feel like losing ten pounds and juicing for a month, if it’s done well.

For many men, a haircut is the one pampering luxury we not only allow ourselves, but revel in, celebrate, and rave about. Our barbers are important members of our inner circle. They are warriors! They’ve got sharp tools, machines, and Barbicide. These are craftsmen and women to whom we confide, often more deeply than our bartender, and with the growing trend of free beer at barbershops, your barber might just be your bartender. With all this in mind, where to get your summer haircut is a choice that’s not to be taken lightly, especially here in Williamsburg, where the number of salons and barbershops rivals the number of tattoo shops. Here, you’re not just expected to look good, but unique. If you keep up with trends, then it’s a whole other can of worms, and hopefully that one side of your head you shaved last summer is starting to grow back.

To celebrate the new season and finagle three free haircuts, I culled word-of-mouth and Yelp reviews, finding three local barbershops in order to compare three summer haircuts that represented the very different kinds of haircut spots in the neighborhood. Without providing any guidelines, I asked them to “do whatever they wanted,” and, as we expected, they delivered vastly different styles.


 

Thanks to my new Hairari faux hawk, I’m now ready for my neck tattoo.

Thanks to my new Hairari faux hawk, I’m now ready for my neck tattoo .

Before: I was desperately in need of a haircut when I walked into Hairari. Work had been sparse, and thus it had been nearly six months since my last professional cut. Summer was coming, and it was getting hot under all that shag. In my last go-around of local barbershops, I discovered Manetamed and fell in love. They were the highest rated neighborhood shop on Yelp, and owner Magda Magdalena had a talent for delivering super-unique and complimentary cuts for artists and business folks alike. The summer air was beginning to circulate, and I yearned for the kind of cut I got at Manetamed. Fortunately, Magdalena had opened a new shop, right in my neighborhood. The interior of Hairari has a slightly nautical theme mixed with the kind of ultra-modern gallery vibe shared with its sister shop Manetamed. The inside is minimalist and clean, and the experience is straightforward, although the actual haircuts are anything but. Manager Sara Schaab cut my hair as she explained why she believes Magda (who also recently opened a Manhattan location for Manetamed) is so successful. “Magda is really focused on the customer,” Schaab says. “If there is ever a problem, she will fix it without overthinking it.”

The difference between Hairari and Manetamed parallels the shops different locations. Though always capable of delivering wild and out-there cuts, Manetamed also caters to those who want more more business-minded and conservative haircuts. Hairari is a Bushwick shop for Bushwick types. Schaab describes her specialty as “A fresh view on creative cuts.” You can always count on Hairari to give you a cut that’s going to make people stop, take notice, and likely comment.

The Verdict: When Sara told me she was giving me a faux hawk, I became extremely wary. I’ve always been of the opinion that, while a Mohawk is an honorable look, a faux hawk is far too faux to be worn with pride. However, I walked out of Hairari with the exact feeling I’d been hoping for. I could feel the air on my scalp, and my face looked sharp. I found myself subconsciously making model faces as I walked back to my apartment, squishing my lips together and posing for a non-existent camera. I felt attractive. Though the cut could be called a faux hawk, the faux aspect of it was subtle and had a thinning effect on my face. The two-tone effect of the nearly shaved sides made the cut unique and interesting. Not only did I look good, but I stood out from the pack.

Hairari Barber Salon
206 Bushwick Avenue, Bushwick
347-689-3363
Price: $35–$45
Defining Quote: “This is one of the fashion capitals of the world. People are more stylish, and our cuts match that.”

 

With my clean cut from Barber Bart ’s, I’m feeling like the blonde Don Draper.

Before: It had only been a couple of weeks since my haircut at Hairari, but I was already feeling like I needed another. The thing about summer haircuts is that they demand frequent maintenance. I also had a lot going on: father’s day, job interviews, and my mother’s birthday. Bart’s, with its more traditional barbershop for the steakhouse loving, scotch drinker feel, seemed a great match for the kind of look I needed, the kind that my mother wouldn’t hate. Give Bart’s barber/manager Michael Wood a chance, and he will make you feel like a new man.

Bart’s, in Williamsburg, is not just a barbershop, it’s a gentleman’s club, aimed at clientele vastly different from those who frequent Hairari. Wood identified the major changes the Bedford Avenue area of Williamsburg was undergoing and decided to leave his longtime post at his father’s Upper East Side barbershop and open a new kind of barbershop. It was a risk. Paul Molé, Wood’s father’s shop, is one of the oldest barbershops in the city, with a steady and high-class clientele. Nonetheless, Wood’s old clients make the hike out to Brooklyn, and it’s easy to see why. Bart’s is equipped with a large flat-screen TV, consistently showing whatever game is on, and customers are welcome to come in, hang out, and watch, whether they’re getting haircut or not. A Kegerator consistently pumps out cold, complimentary beer, and the bar is stocked with vodka, scotch, and the like—all free.

Barber chairs dot the perimeter of the space, the middle of which is occupied by a large pool table. As I waited, one of Wood’s Upper East Side customers, a doctor, showed up an hour early for his appointment with Wood, which pretty much says it all. Bart’s the kind of shop where an entrepreneur or a doctor, a person with limited free time, might actually show up an hour early to shoot the breeze and blow off steam.

“Barbers are important members of our inner circle. They are warriors! They’ve got sharp tools, machines, and Barbicide.”

Wood is a philosopher of sorts in the realm of men’s haircuts. “Men’s haircuts are so easy, and people make them so complex,” says Wood. Wood is a fascinating guy to talk to. He has interesting clients, and he likes to barter. For instance, a machine out in front of the shop will take an HD picture of your new haircut for you and post it to Facebook.

If you use it, you get a discount on your haircut. Hang out and have a drink and Wood might tell you about his hobby as a fish barterer (Wood fishes in the East River and trades what he catches for free dinners, cab rides, and the like,) or he might give you advice about your hair. He told me to put a dot of conditioner in my hair when I’m done showering to keep it from drying out. Toward the end of the haircut, Wood strapped a vibrating machine to his fingers, a rare vintage contraption used by barbers of old, and gave me a head massage. When the cut was done, I was moved to another chair, laid out flat, and put beside a steaming machine to prepare for a straight razor shave. With my face shaved cleaner than it had been since middle school, I was brought into a back room and given a 45-minute massage by an on location masseuse. These services are not included in a regular haircut, but Bart’s in Brooklyn is only a few month’s old, and they’re looking for customers, so an occasional loyalty perk isn’t unlikely. Wood has succeeded in making Bart’s the kind of place you won’t want to leave when your cut is done.

The Verdict: Wood’s cut was versatile, able to be worn up or down with a restored part on right side. This was a cut that made me feel like wearing a suit just for the hell of it. I wore it with a solid pompadour in the front. Wood said he “killed my hipster cut.”

Barber Bart’s Salon
267 Metropolitan Avenue, Williamsburg
347-763-1425
Price: Cut $40; Shave $45; Cut and Shave Combo $70
Defining Quote: “You can’t battle your hair. Use what you don’t like about your hair to your advantage.”


 

pompadour barber williamsburg

Cocoro gave me a super-versatile, low-maintenance pompadour that lasted.

READ MORE

Three Cuts Above Revisited! Barbershop Salons

September 25, 2012 By Jon Reiss Leave a Comment

As a man looking for a haircut in Brooklyn, one faces a quandary: barber or salon?  Barbers have been the go-to choice for men’s haircuts since Ancient Rome, and in the Middle Ages, barbers performed major surgeries. Today, they’re dependable for a quick shave and a haircut, often without an appointment, and are cheaper than a salon. However, there’s a tendency for barbers to have only two or three haircuts up their sleeve. And for a person with an oddly shaped head, or a flair for the unique, this just won’t do.

Salons, on the other hand, tend to give more interesting and creative haircuts, and sometimes even a little pre-haircut pampering. But a man is likely to feel a bit out of place at a salon, which tends to be filled with women and cost more than a barber. Your average barbershop cut costs somewhere between $8 and $30, while a salon cut can range from $40 to $500. Masculinity is also a factor. At your average barbershop, one might not feel masculine enough to live up to the often machismo-soaked standards of an old-school barbershop.

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