Hair Types for Barbers: How to Identify What You're Working With and Adjust Your Technique
Hair Types for Barbers: How to Identify What You're Working With and Adjust Your Technique
Clients do not walk in announcing their hair type. A barber who can identify hair type and density within the first minute of the consultation, before touching the clippers, cuts better. The technique adjustments for different hair types are significant; the same fade that looks clean on fine straight hair can look patchy on coarse Type 4 hair if the approach is not modified. Understanding what you are working with determines which tools, guard progressions, and finishing techniques produce the result the client expects.
The Hair Typing Framework
The most widely used classification is the Andre Walker Hair Typing System, commonly presented on a 1-4 scale with subcategories A, B, and C:
- Type 1 (straight): No curl pattern. Ranges from fine and limp (1A) to coarse and resistant (1C). Low shrinkage. Responds predictably to clippers and scissors.
- Type 2 (wavy): Defined S-wave pattern. Ranges from loose wave (2A) to strong wave approaching curl (2C). Moderate density in most cases. Behaves differently wet vs. dry; check both states before deciding on technique.
- Type 3 (curly): Defined curl from loose spiral (3A) to tight curl (3C). Significant shrinkage when wet or disturbed. Requires dry cutting assessment for accurate length evaluation.
- Type 4 (coily/kinky): Tight coil to zig-zag pattern (4A through 4C). Highest shrinkage (up to 75% or more of stretched length). Dense structure requires specific clipper approach to fade cleanly.
Technique Adjustments by Hair Type
Type 1 and 2: Standard guard progressions work predictably. Fades blend smoothly because the hair lies close to the scalp. Thin or fine Type 1 hair fades quickly (may require half-guards to avoid taking too much off); coarse Type 1 may require additional passes to fully blend transition zones.
Type 3: Assess dry, cut conservatively. Shrinkage means wet-cut lengths spring up shorter than expected. Guard progressions may need to be adjusted because the curl adds visual density at each length. Use a pick or wide-tooth comb to lift the hair into its natural state before evaluating the shape at each stage of the cut.
Type 4: The highest-skill adjustment. Coily hair compresses against itself, making clipper blade contact inconsistent unless the hair is lifted. Use a clipper-over-comb technique or a pick to lift and guide the hair through the clipper rather than pressing the clipper flat against compressed coil. Fades on Type 4 hair require tighter guard steps and more passes per transition zone. Products that define and stretch the coil pattern (leave-in conditioners, curl-defining creams) make the cutting assessment more accurate and the finished result cleaner.
Frequently Asked Questions
What hair type is hardest to fade?
Type 4C (the tightest coil pattern) is technically the most demanding to fade because the shrinkage is extreme, the compressed coil creates inconsistent blade contact, and the high density means visible lines between guard sections are more pronounced. Barbers who develop strong technique on Type 4C hair can execute clean fades on any other hair type with minimal adjustment. Many barbers who specialize in Black hair care describe it as having the most demanding technique ceiling but also the most loyal client base when done well.