First Visit to a New Barbershop: Exactly What to Say
First Visit to a New Barbershop: Exactly What to Say
Getting a good haircut at a new barbershop comes down to communication. The barber cannot read your mind; what you describe shapes what they produce. Here is how to communicate clearly enough to leave with what you wanted.
Before You Sit Down
Have a reference photo ready. The single most effective thing you can do before a first appointment is find 1 to 3 photos of haircuts you want. Show the barber the photo before they pick up anything. A photo eliminates most ambiguity about the specific style, length, and finish you want. Choose photos of men with a similar hair texture to yours; a photo of a style on straight hair does not translate reliably to curly hair, and vice versa. If you do not have a photo, prepare a plain-language description with specific elements: "Low fade on the sides, guard 2 below, guard 3 above, scissors on top to about 2.5 inches, textured not blunt."
What to Communicate
Four things cover most situations. One: the length you want on the sides (specific guard number or "short," "medium," or "long" in terms the barber can map to guards). Two: the fade type and position (skin fade, mid fade, no fade). Three: the length and texture you want on top (in inches if possible, and whether textured or clean-cut). Four: any specific concerns or preferences (do not touch the beard, keep the neckline tapered not squared, I am growing it out so do not take length off the top). Tell the barber these four things, show the photo if you have one, then let them confirm before they start. If they repeat back something different from what you intended, correct it before the cut starts, not after.
During the Cut
If something is going in a direction that concerns you, say it immediately. Waiting until the end to say "this is too short" is too late; catching it at the halfway point gives the barber a chance to adjust. Saying "can you check with me before going shorter on the top?" at the start of the appointment is a reasonable request that most barbers will honor.
Frequently Asked Questions
What if I don't know what I want?
Tell the barber that directly and give them constraints to work within. "I don't have a specific style in mind, but I want it short on the sides, not too short on top, and something that doesn't require much styling in the morning" gives them enough to make a recommendation suited to your face shape and hair texture. Barbers work with men who don't know exactly what they want regularly; it is not an unusual situation. What does not help is saying only "just a trim" without any directional guidance; that instruction is interpreted differently by every barber and produces highly variable results.
How do I find a good barber in a new city?
Look at photos, not just reviews. Most barbershops post their work on Instagram. Find shops whose portfolio shows cuts that match the style direction you want, then book an appointment based on which barber's work looks most like what you are after. A 4.8-star rating means very little if the shop mostly does cuts outside your style. Read reviews specifically mentioning hair type or style similar to yours. Ask local men you see with haircuts you like where they go; this is an underused and highly effective method.