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Seamless Layered Haircut Tutorial - Classic 90 Degree Haircut With Modern Finish | MATT BECK VLOG 38

Jun 09, 2021
Alright guys, in today's Vlog I wanted to do something that you guys have been asking for for a while: it's a

seamless

layered

haircut

, so what that really means to me is a 90°

haircut

, a

classic

haircut from beauty school, but we. We're going to be a little more

modern

, so we're going to follow the shape of the head, that's what will make it perfect because there won't be any weight. Lines within the haircut. This is our final result so you can see that there are a ton of layers in this haircut, but it comes out nice and smooth, you can't see any of the layers throughout the haircut. um we went through we dry cleaned the perimeter so there's a lot of cool techniques in this video so I hope you like it. let me know in the comments below here we go with our step by step thanks ok guys this is my standard section breakdown to follow the shape of the head and also all the different curves on the head so let's go straight to it down. from the center to the occipital bone High occipital bone and then all the way to behind the ear following that occipital bone and then we just take out the parietal crest so that gives us quite a few different rectangles that will really focus on the different curves of the head, so now I'm going to go through a nice solid blunt horizontal line at 0 elevation to start the haircut.
seamless layered haircut tutorial   classic 90 degree haircut with modern finish matt beck vlog 38
What this is going to do is give me a nice strong baseline for the 90

degree

haircut that we have. I'm going to check and create, so just checking the lengths, make sure we're good before we move on to the rest of the cutting. Now I'm going to take vertical sections so you can see I'm putting my elbow in the air this isn't always necessarily the best thing to do because once the elbow is in the air it's hard to stay consistent with the elevation but that's why that I have my head tilted so far forward so as not to stretch too far.
seamless layered haircut tutorial   classic 90 degree haircut with modern finish matt beck vlog 38

More Interesting Facts About,

seamless layered haircut tutorial classic 90 degree haircut with modern finish matt beck vlog 38...

Until now, you must remember that the guest's head moves, so place the guess head in the correct position to keep you as comfortable as possible during the haircut so that you are as as consistent as possible, so only work on what you will notice. I'll comb it a few times, so I'll take it at an angle and then shift it up a little bit. I'm following the shape of the head. I think there are so many different curves in the head that we are working on a curved surface. So every inch I move is different, it creates a different angle in the haircut, so you have to move your arm up and follow the shape of the head.
seamless layered haircut tutorial   classic 90 degree haircut with modern finish matt beck vlog 38
Now I'm not working with any excessive direction, so it all comes straight out of the head, um. I'm getting my guide from that pre-cut section and I'm just working on the shape of the head, so the key is to create a completely round sphere over the top of the head, so if I'm cutting vertically and working on the shape of the head. or working vertically or horizontally along the shape of the head. I want to make sure my movement comes straight out of the head at all times, that's what makes this such a difficult haircut and the reason they'll probably make it a cosmetology haircut is because you really have to keep it consistent with each part of the three dimensional object that you're cutting, or the shape that you're cutting, so you're just working, notice again that I keep combing, I keep bringing it up to the shape of the head.
seamless layered haircut tutorial   classic 90 degree haircut with modern finish matt beck vlog 38
Now I'm not saying this is the standard. I really don't remember exactly the section for the State Board. I think there were only four sections. This is definitely more than that, so this is not a video to help you get through that state. board test, but it's a video to help you with the technique and follow the shape of the head, so a lot of you asked that you want to see

seamless

layers, so, the way you see the seamless layers to make sure stay at that 90°. shapes the shape of the head, a lot of people start to lower the elbow, start to lower the lift and end up with that heavy shelf around the top layer of the haircut and that's why it doesn't look perfect like you guys are talking about. um I'm just checking, uh, you're going to notice that look at the angle of my finger compared to the shape of the head, so I'm working around the crown area and the angle of my finger follows exactly what the shape looks like. of the head, so as I change Through um, you'll notice that I also hold the scissor differently when I get to this height with the lift.
I used to twist my wrist a lot when I started cutting hair and even when I started making videos, so when you look back. some of the videos, um, I would bend my wrist a lot once, now like this, I'm actually still working on that habit, um, but as I go on, you'll notice that in my brain I'm trying to get off autopilot and move my wrist. and You'll see it happen a lot of times to make sure I'm not bending my wrist as much but I'm cutting right, so there you can see how my wrist straightened out and I only used my thumb halfway.
Scissors to make my cut, so again, overload directly from the head working, you want to make sure you don't overdo it too much because that will totally ruin the whole shape, because think if you were to direct this too far back. and you push more weight and length forward then the rest of the haircut will be ruined because I push that weight forward so my guide gets longer and longer then all of a sudden you have one side of the haircut longer than The other thing I noticed about this haircut when I was filming is how many times I look up because I'm filming this alone, so I'm constantly looking at the camera to make sure when I'm doing a longer haircut that my hands are in the frame. of the camera, so this was a very difficult haircut for me because you have to be very precise in where you're directing too much, how you're raising the hair and then there's also your hand in there. frame, which makes it, you know, a little bit more difficult, but just working through um, you could take it as pie shaped sections throughout the crown area, um just to make sure I'm not CU, yeah you still take vertical sections, sometimes you want to. follow those vertical sections, so just working that pie-shaped section that comes right out of where it lives, something else.
I realized that I think it's good to film yourself cutting your hair, but I really need a strong part, so, on both sides of the hair. section, so it's not like you're just picking up the hair and pulling it into a guide that is made up of many different parts of the head. I actually section, comb one side and then comb the other side to make sure. Make nice, clean stripes so I have a nice clean pattern. I think a lot of people will put a lot of hair together and that blurs your pattern, so you get lost in the haircut, but then maybe you get left behind. you go to the salon and then you go ahead and cut it and then you don't get the result you wanted, you want to make sure that if you stay clean with everything, it may seem like it takes longer, but you never have to go.
Go back and correct your mistakes, so try to stay really clean with all of your sections, so now I'm moving on to the side panel of the haircut. I'm going to take my guide from the pre-cut section, so all that. it should be at 90°, if you don't see that 90° angle then I would definitely go back and check and find out what happened, so I just use that 90 angle and follow it to the head shape, so again this will be around three different combs, uh, combs throughout the section, I don't even know if combs is a word, but whatever, um, so we're going through and I'm cutting and just combing, going up, removing each one of those little corners, those small corners.
What you see in that section, if you don't go through it and lift it all the way up, is going to be the weight line that you're going to see in the haircut and that's why you don't get a perfect layer. haircut or why you get heavy parts of the cut you are working on again this comes straight out of the head so there is no excessive direction within this part of the haircut now I know it is like a haircut really standard you learn. uh in school and some of you have been doing hair for 20 or 30 years. uh some of you are just starting out what I would say you would really get out of this cut and the reason I wanted to do it was because first of all you guys are asking for a seamless layering cut and I don't know if you realize that a 90° cut is that, but also, as you're working, you really understand how much the head shape influences how your layers will look.
So it really has nothing to do with it when we talk about... some people learn in school that angles are based on a plane, but you're not working on a plane, you're working on a round surface, so you really need to take that into account. considering all the angles, uh, as you go up your head shape, now we're working on the top, so I'm just going to take out one of those rectangular sections and I'm going to work all the way up pretty much directly up from the shape. of the head, but again, for me it's still 90°.
In school you learn that maybe it's 180°, that would be when they talk about working on a plane, but when I talk about working directly from the head. shape that is creating a 90° angle for me, so just working on the shape of the head creating those 90° and creating those soft layers throughout the head, now the nice thing about this is that if you go through this whole cut of hair, you take these little sections. follow your guide, what you'll see at the end of the cut, when I'm going to connect all of this, is that all these layers that I'm creating now will match up perfectly with the other side and that's how do you know that you stayed consistent throughout the entire haircut ?
It's one of those things for me. I love getting a blowout haircut and then checking it out and seeing that it's as perfect as I could have gotten it. You know, not that. It doesn't always happen, so you know, it's a great feeling knowing that you stayed consistent throughout a haircut, so just moving, now we're going to go through the other side, so one thing I want to talk about this, Notice that half the side, so on the right side of the haircut I'm behind the head cutting and then on the left side of the haircut I'm in front of the head cutting, the reason is because it goes backwards. to the pattern I talk about in every video, so if you haven't heard that Spiel yet, it's in every video I make, but you want to push the new hair into the pattern, so my pattern comes from behind, so I'm Combing the hair from the front pushing it towards the guide at the back.
I never want to pull my guide towards the new hair because if I pull my guide from where he lives, it gets shorter and I will cut the hair shorter. I'll end up with an entire side of the haircut shorter, so simply standing in front of my head keeps me consistent with my hairstyle. You can see in the top section that I'm taking these sections up and they match the other side perfectly. So I follow the other side just to check it, so you can see as I comb it again and then I comb it one more time to connect those two sides, so that's that part of the haircut now.
I'm going to iron it with our vibrating straight iron. I worked it for some reason. I didn't film the blow drying, but the blow drying was a standard flat wrap so you didn't miss anything there and if you want, I know the blow drying is definitely in a lot of other videos I've done so you can see that the 90° haircut doesn't leave the outer perimeter more flattering, so what I'm going to do is check and uh. I flat iron the hair and then I'm going to go around and clean up the perimeter, create the perimeter line that I'm looking for, so even though I cut the base at the beginning of the haircut, that was really just to create a guide now I'm going to go through um and let it lighten and create the perimeter that I was looking for in the final result of the haircut, so I'll

finish

with a spot cut working around the crown area.
I'm just talking about cutting the top area of ​​the haircut because again we're working on creating soft layers throughout the cut, so we're just removing a little bit of that density without changing the line at all, so I'm going to keep the scissors very vertical on this one. moment. It's my misani uh db20 scissors actually no, this is the misani Puffin. I use the db20 for all precision cuts. Now I'm using my dry cutting scissors which is the motani Puffin uh 5.5 which I really love a short blade on my dry cutting. scissors and I just go through and smooth that out now I'm going to use the Puffin and I'm going to create this angle so you can see that angle that the 90° haircut created naturally, but now I want to go through and just Smooth it out around the face just connecting those lines, so I saw the point where I wanted to connect it on the back, so I started using the tip of the scissors to go through and connect those two points.
The same on the back. soft because of the layers I wanted to have a slightly blunter line. I love having blunt, solid lines andpretty in a haircut, as long as it doesn't look too heavy, um, so just continue using the tip of the scissors to clean that up. line uh to

finish

it off and then the last thing I'm going to do is grab my Clipper, this is the Andis uh Supra, I think it's a ZR clipper that they sent us, but I love it, it's cordless so I use it a lot. to clean, so I cut the entire perimeter with the scissors, but sometimes when I want a nice blunt line, I use the clipper just to clean.
Adjust it a little and create those nice hard lines all around the outside perimeter of the haircut , so that's the final result, guys, you can see it's seamless layers, no lines, a very strong line on the outer perimeter that we created, um, let me. Find out in the comments below how long it's been since you got a 90° haircut. I hope you enjoyed it. Okay guys, if you like our 90° haircut, make sure to hit the like button, hit the share button as usual. I thank everyone. The support of your boys. Check out everything we have to offer at free Salon Education.com.
Thanks for watching guys. See you in the next video. Bye bye.

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