Barber working on a clients coily textured hair showing the specialized cutting technique required for tightly coiled hair patterns that requires different approaches to tools timing and technique compared to straight or wavy hair types to achieve clean professional results

Cutting Coily Hair: The Techniques That Work and the Mistakes That Damage the Pattern

July 31, 2026

Cutting Coily Hair: The Techniques That Work and the Mistakes That Damage the Pattern

Coily hair (typically classified as 4a, 4b, or 4c hair based on curl pattern) behaves fundamentally differently than straight or wavy hair. It shrinks significantly when dry (sometimes 50 to 70% of its wet length), it is more fragile when stretched, and it distributes cuts differently because the curl pattern creates visual unevenness in length that is not present in straighter hair. A barber who applies straight-hair cutting logic to coily hair produces inconsistent results. The adjustments required are specific and learnable.

Working Wet vs. Dry

Straight and wavy hair is most commonly cut wet because water makes it lie flat and its true length is visible. Coily hair is most accurately cut dry. When wet, 4c hair stretches significantly; a length that appears correct when wet will shrink considerably once the hair dries and the curl pattern contracts. Cutting dry means working with the hair in its natural state, which is where the client lives and how they wear it.

The exception: some barbers and stylists cut coily hair when damp (not soaking wet) and factor in shrinkage. This requires experience with the specific curl pattern in front of them and a reliable intuition for how much it will shrink. For barbers building their coily hair technique, cutting dry is the more reliable starting approach.

Tool Selection

Clippers work well on coily hair for fades and uniform-length cuts. Use a light touch; pressing clippers into coily hair flattens the curl and can cut more than intended. Scissors work well for detailing and shape-cutting. Thinning shears should be used cautiously; over-thinning coily hair reduces volume significantly and can damage the curl pattern in the affected sections. Afro picks (sometimes called hair picks or combs with widely-spaced teeth) are used to lift and section coily hair without pulling or breaking it; fine-tooth combs are inappropriate for tightly coiled patterns and cause breakage.

The Fade on Coily Hair

Fading coily hair requires more passes and more patience than fading straight hair because the curl pattern can hide unevenness that becomes visible once the hair settles. Check the fade from multiple angles after it appears complete; areas that look blended under direct overhead light may show gaps when viewed from the side. A slight hair pick to lift the hair before inspection reveals any areas that need further blending.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should barbers cut coily hair wet or dry?

Dry is generally more accurate for coily hair. Coily hair (especially 4b and 4c patterns) shrinks significantly when dry, and a cut that looks correct when wet may end up shorter than expected once the curl pattern returns. Cutting dry means working with the hair as the client actually wears it. Some experienced barbers cut damp coily hair and factor in shrinkage, but for barbers building their coily hair skill set, dry cutting is the more predictable starting approach.

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