Tuesday, April 2, 2013

IQ 101: The Hair Makeover at Salon B Singapore

I am a fussy person when it comes to hair.

I have spent years trying to find the perfect, and I mean perfect, hair designer. No, not stylist. Designer. Someone with a point of view, and the technical know how to back it up.

I have been to expensive salons, celebrity cutters, and even hair academies in the search of that one person that would treat my tresses as importantly as I did.

And a few years ago I found her.
Creative Hair Designer with G-Dragon from the Kpop mega-group Big Bang
Way before everything Korean was cool, there was a humble hair professional who was working as a director at a Japanese salon in Singapore.

Badabing Badaboom, one thing led to another, she left the salon and opened her own, and I followed suit.

It has been a long relationship. And it has never gotten boring.
With legend Vidal Sassoon
She received her training from the legendary Vidal Sassoon, so that should give you an idea about her pedigree. She constantly upgrades her skills and industry knowledge annually with trips to London for related events and developmental courses. So long time clients, and she has many, never gets stuck in a rut.

She gets excited when she gets to show clients future trends. She balances real life needs and creative expression. She is a perfectionist.

Clients have known her to not let them leave the salon until the cut is perfect. And I mean perfect. That does not mean you are stuck in the chair forever, although her client base has been expanding at such a rate that I do wonder how she manages.

What is even more crucial to me is the technicality of the cuts. She understands individual head shapes which is crucial to making sure you don't have a dent in your hair style. Those of you who are salon whores will appreciate it when I say your investment grows out beautifully.

You can only get that from a great, technically sound cut.

She doesn't see herself as a Cutter but a Creative Designer.  And that is what she is.

If I am gushing it is for good reason. I have been to really famous salons around the world. I learned the hard way that you NEVER cheat on the person that cuts your hair. When I know I have to be out of the country for an extended period, I time my hair appointments so that I am with her before I leave and after I come back. I am so confident of her talents that I have sent friends and family to her. Like anyone who has moved from a PC to a Mac, they have never looked back.

Her name is Sunny. From Salon B in Singapore.

Let me share a recent transformation that involved a very good friend, Ms Ho Shee Mun. She decided she wanted a real change, something that was not available or doable anywhere else.  Brave. But we all know that a great hair transformation changes not just the look but the spirit too. This is her story, guided by Sunny.

Let the pictures tell the story.

The Process
Shee Mun Before
Preparing for the makeover!
Sunny working on Shee Mun
Finessing
The Results

Happy Client!
Sunny with a very happy Shee Mun
Shee Mun After
What Sunny did for Shee Mun

  • Spring Summer 2013 Trend
  • Disconnection Hair Cut
  • Round Graduation Under Cut
  • Triangle Layer on Top
  • Side length kept for feminine appeal 

What this means to us non professionals?

  • Bangs that meet up with the sides in a gradual fashion
  • Volume at the back, balancing the shape of the head
  • Layered to create separation for the Indigo Purple highlights
  • Combination and Balance between short and long lengths, best of both worlds
  • Easy for growing out hair without much maintenance

The outcome speaks for itself.

She is gorgeous, she walked out of the salon looking and feeling like a renewed person. She had never attempted anything this different. But even though Singapore is so change adverse, change is a good thing. And Shee Mun has gone from having acceptable hair to WOWZAI!

Good for her! If only more women would take the plunge and do something radical to shake up their lives!

Some of you may go gaga when I say Sunny has close ties with the Kpop world, which explains her many pictures with the biggest names in the industry. Other so called Korean salons cannot claim this. But I will be writing a lot more about Salon B and especially Sunny's creative work in future for a different reason.

I believe it is important to encourage Asian design talents and we really have to recognize true creativity when they appear. Let's face it, visionaries are rare.

And Sunny is a visionary.

For more information about Salon B, you can visit these sites.

www.salonb.com.sg
Salon B Facebook
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Event: (Update) Canada Philippine Fashion Week

The Canada Philippine Fashion Week, helmed by Uber Creative Genius Jeff Rustia is in full swing. Mr Rustia is currently in Manila working tirelessly on the details of the event, and from the way it has been progressing, Canadians can expect a whole lotta glamor very soon!

They secured Philippines Supermodel and Award Winning Actress Angel Aquino to become the face of the event.

What I love love love about it is that the organizers put her in a Filipino designer John Ablaza original. It is lush, it is grand, it is romantic.

The most admirable thing is that the celebrity power is being used for greater good. Ms Aquino signed posters to be auctioned off for the Kol Hope Foundation for Children, a charity that helps disabled children in both the Philippines and Canada, and a beneficiary of the event.

Supporting fashion = supporting a great cause.  Nothing better than that!

The Star meter is rising people!

You can't expect anything less from a Jeff Rustia event!

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Monday, April 1, 2013

Event: Fide - A Fashion Hang Out

What:    A Fashion Hangout
When:   April 12 1800-2300
Where:  The Shoppes at Marina Bay Sands Singapore
Why:     Hosted by 'How Do I Look' TV Presenter Jeannie Mai
             Chance to win trips to Paris Couture Week or Fide Fashion Weeks in Singapore
             Just Bloody Fun
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Commentary: Diana Vreeland on Fashion, Life and the Eye that Travels

...the words did not flow.

It has been a while since I have written anything for both my blogs. Preparing for my OZNZ 2013 adventure was one reason. The trip itself was another. Right after, the pages remained blank because I was just not inspired.

I have always maintained that one should not say or write anything if one has nothing significant to offer.

And so while the fashion world kept on turning, I just found myself in an unusual spot: voxless by choice.

They say that what you need the most will come when the time is right for you to receive it.

And today, it did.


I chanced upon a new DVD release of a fashion themed movie. It was a documentary of sorts of the late and great Diana Vreeland, the uber editor in chief of Vogue. The unique aspect of this movie was that it was largely narrated by Mrs Vreeland herself, recorded by her biographer before her death.

It was like oral fashion history at its best.

As I watched the stories unfold, about her life in the roaring 20's, her passion for the 60's, and her Hollywood connection of the 70's, I realized that she lived.

She LIVED.

It was clear that she was not one to dwell on disasters, and by her own admission, she never really saw much in her life.

But that is a matter of perspective.

She had a mother that made it clear she was the ugly duckling of the family, one who flirted with her boyfriends.

She earned a paltry $14,000 a year as editor of Harpers Bazaar only to be given a $1,000 raise after years of service.

She lost the love of her life, her husband of 46 years to cancer.

She was fired from Vogue.

And yet this woman had a fullness of life that not many would choose to pursue.

She was once in the same building as Hitler.  She had her night gowns fitted by Coco Chanel. She claimed that Charles Lindberg flew over her estate. She identified and celebrated the cultural significance of the morally shocking bikini.

Certainly her accomplishments are many. She was the precursor of Anna Wintour and unlike popular belief, she was the first fashion editor in chief to recognize the importance of celebrity.

And so, in spite of the challenges in her life, her roll call of achievements seem to overwhelm.

We must have all shared on some level the experiences she went through. And yet, her attitude towards those life events didn't make her falter. Instead of bending to negativity, she used it to her advantage. She was resilient and a survivor, and yet she never credited herself as those things. She was always about what was ahead, never about the rocks and barbs in the path behind her.

When one truly lives, definitions and descriptions have no meaning.

Mrs Vreeland's stand was also 'never be boring'.

And that alone seems to capture the essence of her spirit. It is the joie de vivre that is palpable that even after her death, and through the screen, it just resonates.

And inspires.
It takes a certain nerve, and courage, and yes, balls to be clear about who you are in life, and what you want to do and be. To stand in the face of external perception and the status quo and defy all conventions. To make the world around you work with the vision you have for yourself and for others.

It is more often than not that the world forces its own perceptions and definitions upon you, claiming that the opposite would mean you were worth less.


Not worthless. Just less.

People can't handle originals as well as they can the status quo. They find it hard to embrace change and differences. Individuality, especially in a highly evolving society where one's identity is marked by a bar code, is a commodity used for the masses.

Yet, it is the originals and the individuals that push for change and the acceptance of differences. They force the world to be better, to dream bigger, to learn newness that have never been imagined before.

You see these qualities in people like Steve Jobs, Gandhi, and yes Diana Vreeland.

These people lived their lives with passion. They marched to the beat of their own drum. They had their own style.

And commonly, they were also much maligned.

Being an original isn't something you just write about. It is something you live. Something you are, without apologies. And when it is time for you to depart, you do so with no regrets.

And so the epiphany learned from a fashion icon is this.

I realized that I have apologized for who I am, how I thought, what I chose to be for too long, to appease too many people who, in the final analysis, would have very few lines (if any) in my autobiography if it ever gets written. It then becomes a slow climb upwards. It is unlearning what I have learned, and regaining what I have always known. But most of all, it is living the life that has been destined to be mine from the time of birth.

As Mrs Vreeland says: 
"There's only one very good life and that's the life you know you want and you make it yourself".

So years after Mrs Vreeland's passing, she is still the lady who challenges people with the simple question "Why Don't You...".

My simple answer is: I shall.

Quotations from Diana Vreeland

“There’s nothing more boring than narcissism - the tragedy of being totally… me. We’re all capable of it. And we all know examples of it - these beautiful tragedies…. I loathe narcissism, but I approve of vanity.”

"You know the greatest thing is passion, without it what have you got? I mean if you love someone you can love them as much as you can love them but if it isn't a passion, it isn't burning, it isn't on fire, you haven't lived."
"Style-- all who have it share one thing: originality."

“Style was a standard. Didn’t hurt anyone… But you gotta have style. It helps you get down the stairs. It helps you get up in the morning. It’s a way of life. Without it, you’re nobody. I’m not talking about lots of clothes.”

"I believe you see, in the dream. I think we only live through our dreams and our imagination. That's the only reality we really ever know.”
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