The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pandemic hair, turns out we do care: Staying home has redefifine­d grooming

Self- care becomes a rite of passage; salons adapt to keep up with change.

- By Nedra Rhone nedra. rhone@ ajc. com

Before the pandemic kept her locked down at home in Midtown, Kwa Hill had a $ 100- perweek beauty habit that included maintainin­g her signature pixie haircut.

“I went to the salon every single week — hair, brows, nails, lashes. That was my life,” said Hill, 51, who works in corporate fifinance. “I was a bigtime ( beauty) snob.”

When the pandemic sent her into a tailspin, she called her stylist.

“We started talking about how we were going to survive,” Hill said.

Najah Aziz, owner of Like The River Salon in Atlanta, scrambled to assemble “quarantine premium survival hair kits” with shampoo, conditione­r and other products for her clients to purchase online. Aziz went live on Instagram, showing clients how to wash and st yle their hair at home. She also started doing video consultati­ons to answer their questions.

By the time the salon reopened 10 weeks later, Hill was a new woman on a new journey. Her pixie had grown into a bob, she did her nails weekly

with a popular home manicure kit, and the lash extensions were a thing of the past.

“I thought I had to spend time and money doing these things when I realized … I have the capacity to do some of those things at home — and not only do I have the capacity, I like it,” Hill said.

For the many ways in which the pandemic has changed our lives, one of the most visible is how we l ook. We have gained or lost weight. Let our hair grow long or cut it short. We’ve dyed our hair blue or embraced silver locks. We have learned the hard way, said some Georgia residents, that self- care isn’t selfish but a pathway to self- discovery.

Beauty and grooming was one of the first industries to return in Georgia when, in April, just a few weeks after Gov. Brian Kemp issued a stay- at- home order, he said salons, barbershop­s and tattoo parlors could open with enhanced safety measures such as mask wearing and fewer clients at one time.

But even that could not save every business. An estimated 15- 20% of salons across the country closed for good as a result of the pandemic, Steve Sleeper, executive director of the Profession­al Beauty Associatio­n said.

“Despite some shrinkage, I think ( the i ndustry) will come back more vibrant and stronger than ever,” he said. “The pandemic reaffirmed the relationsh­ips clients have with their service providers and owners.”

While the industry creeps back to normalcy, salon clients have learned to embrace change and adapt to a new vision of themselves.

Dan Parker, a drama teacher in Cobb County, resorted to his “summer dad” vibe: hair cut close enough to remind him of summers as a boy, when his parents would shave his head and send him off to camp.

He bought a pair of $ 30 Wahl clippers on Amazon and went outside on the patio. When his wife shied away from lining the back of his head, he learned how to position two mirrors just so, to get it done.

“I love the low maintenanc­e of it,” said Parker, 41. “It is one less thing I have to worry about.”

For some Georgians, the isolation of the pandemic provided the cover needed to indulge their curiosity. What would happen if they ditched the color or stopped shaving?

Before t he pandemic, Russ Be lin, vice president for the Southeast region of Broadway Across America, shaved every other day and got a haircut every three weeks. He worked out in the office gym after work. Now he gets his beard trimmed once a month and his hair cut every six to eight weeks. Workouts with streaming videos, free weights and resistance bands take place in the basement of his Peachtree Corners home.

It was the first time in 30 years he grew out his hair and beard, but the look didn’t stick. The gray was just too much, he decided.

“Maybe when I am 60 and retired, that will be the time I give it another shot,” said Belin, 46.

Spending weeks away from the salon offered the perfect timing for Rebecca Hadj Taieb to embrace her silver locks. The Druid Hillsbased teacher had started to dread spending three hours at the salon and fighting for weekend appointmen­ts just to get color services, she said. Now she gets more compliment­s on her silver hair than she ever did before.

“It is the right choice for me and I’m not going back,” said Hadj Taieb, who feels more natural and connected and not so “handcuffed to my stylist.” “You become a different person in a more self- satisfying kind of way,” she said.

The link between self- care and mental health is one that came into sharp focus during the pandemic, said Amy Leavell Bransford, owner of Aviary Beauty and Wellness and Sparrowhaw­k, a woman- focused tattoo shop in Old Fourth Ward.

“Feeling the best you can about yourself and loving where you are … that has been my big takeaway as a business owner and a mother,” she said. “We have always loved what we do, but to love it in a pandemic is next level. It has become more of a therapy than it ever was before.”

Like others in the grooming business, Bransford pivoted to make sure her business is sustainabl­e — making home deliveries of products, promoting hydrafacia­ls to treat “maskne” ( acne from mask wearing), and for the first time, applying for grant funding. While 30% of her clients have not returned to the salon, the books are full, and business in January and February was at normal levels, she said.

Aziz, who reopened her salon after Memorial Day, also reports a rebound in business. “Everybody that came in needed a whole makeover,” said Aziz. The pandemic has renewed her focus on the client experience, she said. Now every cl i ent has a Zoom consultati­on before they come in, which helps minimize traffic and save time, and she continues selling the $ 130 quarantine hair kits online. About 500 have been sold to date, she said.

Hill returned to the salon, but only to get hair color and trims every six to eight weeks, she said. With the money she has saved, she bought a new bike and roller skates to enjoy the outdoors.

“I am high- maintenanc­e and you never could have paid me to believe I would be in this place that I am today,” Hill said. “While I can’t say I won’t do some of it again, I know I will never go back to the lifestyle that I had before.”

‘ Everybody that came in needed a whole makeover.’ Najah Aziz

Like The River Salon owner

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Like The River Salon owner Najah Aziz talks over some ideas with a client during a Zoom call consultati­on on March 9 from her Howell Mill Road business in Atlanta.
STEVE SCHAEFER/ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON Like The River Salon owner Najah Aziz talks over some ideas with a client during a Zoom call consultati­on on March 9 from her Howell Mill Road business in Atlanta.
 ?? PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER/ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON ?? His wife is a bit wary of helping him, so Dan Parker has learned to use two mirrors to get his own haircut down pat on the porch of his Atlanta home.
PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER/ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL- CONSTITUTI­ON His wife is a bit wary of helping him, so Dan Parker has learned to use two mirrors to get his own haircut down pat on the porch of his Atlanta home.
 ??  ?? Najah Aziz ( lef t), owner of Like The River Salon, and Leah Dixon set up a Zoom call with a client. Aziz has rolled with the pandemic’s changes, now selling popular hair care kits online.
Najah Aziz ( lef t), owner of Like The River Salon, and Leah Dixon set up a Zoom call with a client. Aziz has rolled with the pandemic’s changes, now selling popular hair care kits online.

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