Asbury Park Press

Flames and floods haven’t stopped Just Hair & Nails

Oceanport shop marks 50 years of overcoming

- Susan Bloom

OCEANPORT – Growing up in Oceanport, Justine Talarico always loved styling her own and others’ hair. And in 1974, that passion led her to open Just Hair & Nails in Oceanport, a cozy salon that was confronted by its share of challenges over the past 50 years, all of which she met with courage and fortitude.

“I was always into hair as a kid and used to style my girlfriend­s’ and mother’s hair all the time,” recalled Talarico, 73, a lifelong Oceanport resident who recently moved to Lakewood. While still in high school, “I went to Richard’s School of Beauty Culture (which later became Wilfred Academy) in Red Bank at night, and after graduating from high school I went right to work at salons in Long Branch and Matawan, and I also taught at the beauty school.”

“In 1974, when I was 24, a 1,200-square-foot retail space in Oceanport that had formerly been a beauty salon called The Finish Line became available and it seemed like the perfect opportunit­y for me to go out on my own,” Talarico said. “My parents loaned me the $7,000 I needed to start the business, helped me set up the shop, and over time I paid them back every cent.”

“When I first opened the shop, it was called Beauty Port, but men started coming in with long hair and I realized that I needed a name with broader appeal because we were doing women’s, men’s and kids’ hair,” she said. “We ended up running a contest to choose the best new name for our shop and ‘Just Hair’ won. It was more unisex and was also a bit of a play on my first name.”

The shop ultimately remained in that location – next door to the Oceanport post office – for 41 years, and nail services were added to the salon’s menu (and name) in 2015.

Floods and fire

But while business was always steady, Talarico and her shop weren’t spared from a series of personal and profession­al setbacks, starting with the tragic loss of Talarico’s beloved college-aged daughter Jessica, who was killed by a drunk driver in 2001.

A decade later, Hurricane Irene in 2011 and Superstorm Sandy in 2012 hit her shop hard.

“Because we’re located right by the Shrewsbury River, we ended up with three feet of water in the shop after Sandy,” she said. “But amazingly, my staff and I were able to clean everything up and return to business within two weeks.”

The hits kept coming, however.

“In 2015, the pizza place next door to us caught fire and it expanded into our shop,” Talarico said. “While thankfully no one was hurt, our entire shop was damaged from fire, smoke and water and it was so traumatic.”

Luckily, she was able to move right into another space – a former bank located in the next shopping center – owned by her same landlord.

“Like the wonderful family they are, all of our staff members and their husbands came to help us with the electrical, plumbing and constructi­on and we had our new shop up and running within three weeks,” she said. “But right after that I developed a case of shingles from all of the stress.”

And then in 2020, like so many other businesses, her shop was closed down for three months during the pandemic.

Throughout these challenges, however, Talarico remained determined to succeed. “This business has been so rewarding to me and I never haven’t been there for my customers,” she said.

‘Hometown kind of shop’

Today, in the 1,600-square-foot shop that’s been home to the Just Hair & Nails team for the past nine years, “we have 10 hair styling stations, a shampoo room, and manicuring spaces, and we serve men, women and children,” Talarico said. “We provide a full range of services, including cuts, color, keratin treatments, body waves, perms, balayage (the “painting” of hair) and ‘fairy hair,’ a process popular with women and girls where we weave strands of tinsel into their hair so that it glitters.”

“I’ve always kept our prices reasonable because I never wanted to lose customers,” Talarico said of the shop, where haircut and blow-dry packages for women start at $50, men’s cuts start at $30, and kids’ cuts start at $20.

In terms of trends, “we’ve been through so many hairstyles over the years and I learned them all, from pixie cuts and long layers back in the ‘70s and ‘80s to razor cuts, bobs and layered bobs, which are still popular today,” Talarico said.

“These days, boys are wearing longer hair and loose beach waves are big for women. Anything goes when it comes to hair colors and highlights, and keratin treatments are popular because people like long

 ?? PHOTOS PETER ACKERMAN/ASBURY PARK PRESS ?? Justine Talarico, owner, second from left on front row, and her long-time staff at Just Hair & Nails in Oceanport. From the left are Pam Hollander, Paul Connelly, Bunni Carroll, Geogea Scarpino, Thomas Blackburn and Linda Mihalic.
PHOTOS PETER ACKERMAN/ASBURY PARK PRESS Justine Talarico, owner, second from left on front row, and her long-time staff at Just Hair & Nails in Oceanport. From the left are Pam Hollander, Paul Connelly, Bunni Carroll, Geogea Scarpino, Thomas Blackburn and Linda Mihalic.
 ?? ?? Just Hair & Nails in Oceanport, owned by Justine Talarico, is celebratin­g its 50th year in business.
Just Hair & Nails in Oceanport, owned by Justine Talarico, is celebratin­g its 50th year in business.

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