indefinite
Well-Known Member
http://lifestyle.msn.com/beautyandf...howmc.aspx?cp-documentid=7081353&imageindex=1
Most of us wouldn’t drop $1000 on haircuts in a year, let alone in an afternoon. So when we heard that beauty maven and Dove stylist Gretchen Monahan was offering a three-hour-plus indulgence at her NYC studio (she’s also got salons in Boston), and that style overachievers from Kelly Ripa to Trish McEvoy were banging down her door, we had to ask: What could possibly cost so much? (Caviar-infused hairspray?) Here’s what a grand of cutting really looks like.
FRINGE BENEFITS No harried receptionist or whir of assembly-line blow-dryers here. I'm greeted at the door by Monahan herself, who hands me flip-flops and a set of soft terry sweats and offers to order in sushi, Starbucks, whatever I want. "This is about pampering," Monahan says. Which also means no awkward scrambling for tip money later -- she doesn't accept them. Before Monahan gets out her scissors, she zeros in on my problem areas and asks about my past hair frustrations and overall beauty goals. It's the first time I've really articulated what I want (easy-to-style hair, extra body) -- a welcome change from the standard five-minute salon consult. Unlike other high-end hair gurus, she's not hawking aggressively trendy shapes: "I'm not trying to make my statement on your head."
THE TRIPLE THREAT Using an art-store paintbrush, Monahan conditions with a custom blend of acids, oils, and protein in three sections: scalp, middle, and ends. My cocktail includes exfoliating lactic acid to slough off dryness and even out oily patches on my (no kidding) "combination scalp"; jojoba, grapeseed, and palm oils to smooth the shafts; and a shot of straight protein to nourish damaged ends.
WET SEAL After the wet cut, a home-concocted gloss is steamed in with a wet-to-dry hair iron. "This shine will last a month, whereas other treatments wash out after two shampoos," Monahan says. Before drying, she would normally touch up roots, but I'm a color-free zone. And since hair changes from wet to dry, she fine-tunes the style with post-blowout snips.
SELF-SERVICE I may lack the bank necessary to become a regular, but I plan to steal a few Monahan signatures, like upgrading my conditioner and working with -- rather than denying the presence of -- my pesky cowlick. And she even let me keep the terry sweats.
Most of us wouldn’t drop $1000 on haircuts in a year, let alone in an afternoon. So when we heard that beauty maven and Dove stylist Gretchen Monahan was offering a three-hour-plus indulgence at her NYC studio (she’s also got salons in Boston), and that style overachievers from Kelly Ripa to Trish McEvoy were banging down her door, we had to ask: What could possibly cost so much? (Caviar-infused hairspray?) Here’s what a grand of cutting really looks like.
FRINGE BENEFITS No harried receptionist or whir of assembly-line blow-dryers here. I'm greeted at the door by Monahan herself, who hands me flip-flops and a set of soft terry sweats and offers to order in sushi, Starbucks, whatever I want. "This is about pampering," Monahan says. Which also means no awkward scrambling for tip money later -- she doesn't accept them. Before Monahan gets out her scissors, she zeros in on my problem areas and asks about my past hair frustrations and overall beauty goals. It's the first time I've really articulated what I want (easy-to-style hair, extra body) -- a welcome change from the standard five-minute salon consult. Unlike other high-end hair gurus, she's not hawking aggressively trendy shapes: "I'm not trying to make my statement on your head."
THE TRIPLE THREAT Using an art-store paintbrush, Monahan conditions with a custom blend of acids, oils, and protein in three sections: scalp, middle, and ends. My cocktail includes exfoliating lactic acid to slough off dryness and even out oily patches on my (no kidding) "combination scalp"; jojoba, grapeseed, and palm oils to smooth the shafts; and a shot of straight protein to nourish damaged ends.
WET SEAL After the wet cut, a home-concocted gloss is steamed in with a wet-to-dry hair iron. "This shine will last a month, whereas other treatments wash out after two shampoos," Monahan says. Before drying, she would normally touch up roots, but I'm a color-free zone. And since hair changes from wet to dry, she fine-tunes the style with post-blowout snips.
SELF-SERVICE I may lack the bank necessary to become a regular, but I plan to steal a few Monahan signatures, like upgrading my conditioner and working with -- rather than denying the presence of -- my pesky cowlick. And she even let me keep the terry sweats.