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How To Cut a Medium Length Layered Choppy Bob Haircut like Julianne Hough and Khloe Kardashian

Jun 02, 2021
Hey guys, Matt Beck from free salon education.com. I'm here with another video series, I love this one because what I do is take your questions and create content around those questions, this way I can answer them. Your guys questions for you, I'll pretend almost face to face and I know so I know I'm communicating to you what you're looking to get out of these videos and it also helps me with content creation because I'm posting so many videos so I have a question I sent really wanting to answer it to do this

haircut

for you and with you and also if you want to send questions to our channel you can post them in the comments below after. you hit subscribe, make sure you do it after you hit share and share it with your friends, but then post your questions in the comments.
how to cut a medium length layered choppy bob haircut like julianne hough and khloe kardashian
You can also go to our Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, anything else, use the hashtag, free classroom education, ask your questions. and we will get to them. I have tons and tons of questions prepared for creating videos, so let's not stop any longer, let's get started. Here is the question Jen asked. I get a lot of requests for a Julianne Hough cut, the popular long bob. bob Jennifer Lawrence also has this type of cut, sometimes I shave it depending on weight. I would love to see your interpretation with scissors. I love you all Jen okay Jen so I'm excited about this

haircut

because this haircut.
how to cut a medium length layered choppy bob haircut like julianne hough and khloe kardashian

More Interesting Facts About,

how to cut a medium length layered choppy bob haircut like julianne hough and khloe kardashian...

I actually saw Julianne Hough on TV recently last week and I like the style of the haircut so I want to show you what we did because I already did the cut. I like to make the cut first and then we break it up. down a little bit so the cut is here now what I love about the cut and there's a little bit of a difference. First I'll tell you what it is. I t

hough

t a lot about this haircut, you could use a razor. and do it in two seconds, but I like to have structure and we're always looking for longevity and haircuts, not just to tear them up and send them out the door.
how to cut a medium length layered choppy bob haircut like julianne hough and khloe kardashian
I want my clients to have their haircuts last much longer, so when you look at this haircut there is a lot of structure built in, let's break it down step by step. What I like about Julianne Hough's haircut. The Kardashian girls haircut. Sorry, I don't know their names, um, I don't know. I know what it is, I have to clarify that, but it's a very strong baseline, so I love that it breaks into layers throughout the cut, but the baseline is very solid and it's cut very square, so Julianne Hough has it a little longer than this. but with a mannequin I like to raise it a little bit to have a little more structure and the Kardashian girl is also a little lower, but I like the shape to expand, we use the wand to roll it up.
how to cut a medium length layered choppy bob haircut like julianne hough and khloe kardashian
You'll see all of that in this step by step, so I hope you enjoy this video. If you like it, post it and share it with all your friends. We would love to do it and I hope you enjoy it. this haircut and style because it is something that is definitely suitable for beauty salons and can serve you a lot, so let's get started. I just turned his gaze, let's get started. I hope you enjoy the haircut, let me know in the comments, thank you. Okay, so I wanted to. Start by sharing with you the mannequin I use.
This is the Erricka pivot point dummy. It is a solid mannequin, which means the hair on top is longer than the hair on the bottom so you can start nice and fresh with your haircut. We're not starting with a

layered

mannequin, as many mannequins are

layered

together with the same

length

of hair, so I like to start with this one. Additionally, the best thing about pivot point mannequins is that they comply with international social responsibility. organization and basically what they do is they are the international labor standard that helps protect workers at every step of the supply chain, so they make sure that companies are responsible for who is putting together the mannequin heads.
Okay, so let's look at the section. We're going to go to the parietal crest straight back, so the top edge of the parietal crest of the eyebrow will find that round of the head and bring it back to a point that I'll show you in a second and then go. To take that point, you're going to draw it right behind the ear on both sides and this will be a better view here, this is the point on the back that is in the center of the crown, so if you can imagine that makes it a lot easier, so just bring that point to the center crown of your head and then lower it behind your ear.
Now I checked and I forgot to press record to show you how I cut the bass line so there's a little bit of imitation. very simple I just went through a blunt one I just combed through all the hair and cut it because now I'm going to go through it and layer it so I don't have to go through and part a bunch and take a lot of little partings and just cut it off now we have our new start placing the hair just below the neck of the mannequin now I'm going to draw a line along the occipital bone a little bit I'm going to say slightly above but not Actually, this is basically the occipital bone and the reason for this is that that will be the point heavier from the base of the haircut, so if you think about how the head curves up, which we talk about all the time, that's where I want I take my guide, so I section right at the occipital bone, cut it and now I'm taking vertical sections straight from the head and as I move down the back I'm going to head towards the front so I bring the hair straight back cutting more of us square in the back of the head, so if you think about this horizontally, this would be more or less a straight line in the back, so vertically you're just carrying it back.
I like to cut this vertically, obviously. Because we're working with a nice, high elevation with this pretty much straight down from the head, our top angle that's on the curve of the head is probably about zero, but then we're around ninety degrees everywhere else. low, so we're taking off weight but we're not taking off too much, that's really the key to this, is to keep the haircut heavy because as you saw in the photos at the beginning, we want a nice, light, airy haircut, but We don't want it to have too many layers to where you know it just looks moldy or something.
I guess that's the easiest way to describe it now, you'll notice that his head is tilted back, so if you rewind it and look at how he was cutting it before he tilted his head forward a lot of people think that tilting his head affects the cutting of hair because it affects the way body position works, so now that I'm cutting with my fingers down I tilt his head back slightly, so that makes me feel comfortable so I can be more consistent with his haircut. The other thing is that when I get to the corner right around the ear, I like to pull that hair out more just a little bit around that edge so I don't square it off as much.
So I checked it horizontally to see that line. You can see that slight curve. That's because I rounded the corner a little in the last section. Now the lift is as high as possible on this part of the lightly cut hair. The angle of my finger is slightly tilted forward towards the head, so it feels more diagonally forward, that's the same thing. I'm doing it parallel to the section so every part I take and this part of the haircut is also diagonal forward and I just work my way through the haircut that way stationary guide bringing everything to the exact same place making sure of combing all those little strands of hair now that takes the weight out of the haircut but doesn't end the line that pushes basically if I hold all the hair way up in the air it's going to push all the weight down so now that I have this heavy weight at the bottom, I go through it and cut a nice horizontal square line and that gives me the heaviness of that.
Strong line that you see in those haircuts that I love and that still gives me light layers on top, so sometimes we don't always try to cut everything at once, I'm raising everything to remove the layer or do the layers and I take the weight of the top of the haircut and then I push the weight towards the bottom of the haircut and then I cut my nice horizontal line to give a strong base to this haircut and that's what I love about doing this . haircut with scissors instead of a razor because if I did it with a razor it would be more broken at the bottom and I like that kind of thick feeling at the bottom of the haircut, now we take out the top with a really simple hairstyle. all forward and I'm going to make a part in the center.
I like to cut out what I'm not working with, it just keeps me more organized. It's definitely cleaner on video and doesn't mean you have to crop it, but for me it works. I'm trying my guide because that's what I'm cutting first, so I bring my finger up to his chin, that's where I want him to sit and then I cut. I'm standing on the opposite side of his head. so I'm directing everything that goes across his forehead towards me and I'm going to cut it a couple of times just to make sure I have a nice solid line where I want it and then I'm going to drop it down to make sure it's the

length

I want.
I want it, so I just take another diagonal section forward and bring it to me. The best thing about cutting the top last is that I already cut the sides and since I already cut the sides, they are already the length I want. you can see they're starting to fall out, which is great because I wanted to keep the base of the haircut standard and then when I bring the top closer and cut those layers shorter, that'll give me a nice touch on top, but every time . I take a section and I keep pulling it towards me, what's happening is the hair is getting longer in the back because I'm directing it too much towards me, so the more I direct it, the more I pull it towards me, the better.
It gets longer in the back, so it still gives a lot of length in the back, but nice short layers in the front, it gives a lot of movement when you come in with that wand, later you'll see how it affects us taking a piece. of what we cut before as our guide and then we do the same thing directing it towards us and cutting, you see, I went over it a few times, the reason is to make sure the line is nice and sharp because the better the lines. If you are in for a haircut, the better the shape of the end result, the more successful your client will be and then they will have to come back for adjustments.
I think a lot of times, when customers come back. very often for haircuts the reason is because they don't need it because their hair was already destroyed when they left the salon, if you build a structure and a haircut they have to come back and keep it because it was working for them and they want it. To continue working here we go Brocato mousse I love this mousse. I set it up in the last video I did, it just makes the hair so easy to work with, it's not heavy, it's not sticky, it has a great hold on our girl. hair dryer, I draw with my hands and the reason I do it is because with this style it's a very free style, it's not just about trying to really polish it, polish it and comb all the hair back.
Normally you wouldn't see me doing this if I were to dry-cut some

choppy

hairspray, but since I'm using the wand, I like to blow-dry my hair back to give it volume, which I did go for. a paddle brush at the end just to give it a little shine because blow drying by hand usually isn't good enough and then I follow up with the wand and I'm curling everything back and I'm just doing this for real. Fast, I mean obviously this is fast forward too, but I'm picking up pieces that are about 1/2 inch in diameter. I'm just grabbing a little circle of hair and then that's what I do as I keep curling everything back and then we're going to go ahead and part it at the end.
A little trick is when you're on the opposite side, you just want to be consistent with how you're doing it. So umm, my arms come up, I'm raising my elbow and holding the plank down to allow me to wrap it. You'll see I squeeze the tightest part so this iron gets thin, it starts out thin and gets wider towards the end, the reason I like this type of iron instead of the one that starts thicker and gets thinner is that I like to start the base nice and tight with a curl and then keep the ends a little straighter, you'll notice that's the case.
Really the big difference between using a curling iron or not is that you get that tight base and then it straightens out towards the end, so this is the end result just adding a little bit of Brocato

medium

hold hairspray, just lifting the hair and fanning it out. I hope you liked this haircut. Share it with your friends. This is something they can definitely use in the salon again and again. Hit the subscribe button and post those requests, any haircuts you'd like to see.

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