Jump to content

avara42

Regular Member
  • Posts

    13
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by avara42

  1. Look at a guy in their mid 50s like Brad Pitt with a juvenile hairline, is anyone really complaining? For most people it simply looks better.

     

    Yeah, just be careful because those grafts could be more useful elsewhere. I think chasing a youthful hairline to excess creates problems in the future. Think 40, 50, 60, and beyond. A little recession looks good on many people and it's an indictator of physical maturity. It also guides the natural part.

     

    And keep in mind the rule of thirds. A forehead that is shorter than the length of the nose tends to look less balanced.

  2. hi guys

     

    Need some help .

     

    wanna know if any guy here uses any product apart from the usual Toppik / hair fibres

    to make their hair look thicker after a HT ?

     

    Anyone using any wax or clay to add VOLUME and help hair appear Dense after a HT !

     

    All inputs appreciated .

     

    Aveda hair products are excellent. Their thickening paste is probably what you're looking for.

    Fiber or clay is also good for anyone looking for texture. Experiment with matte or shine finishes to see what works for you.

  3. It's funny you said, because I can tell he genuinely thought he did me a "solid" and that's exactly what I look like. After he was done, he then proceed to tell me how all his boys in Israel got the "tattoo" that covers their entire head - I assume he was referring to some micropigmetnation...yeah, of the whole head, I'm sure no one is fooled by that and it looks so "real". Anyway he asked me why I didn't do that...I simply answered, because I want my real hair.

     

    micropig of whatever you'd prefer to call it is essentially a tattoo and it will fade or blur over time. I think it's bizzare, but I also think the same of neck stretching by the Kayan Lahwi tribe or artificial cranial deformation by ancient Mayans and Incas.

     

     

    Look for a more reputable barber. If you live in NYC there are great ones. Yelp is a good place to start.

  4. The horrors of the strip technique. Can you not transplant hair on the scar left by the strip method? I believe that would help and provide you a permanent solution.

     

    I haven't seen many successful examples, but Bernstein discusses that here:

     

    https://www.bernsteinmedical.com/answers/details-of-transplanting-hair-into-scar-tissue/

     

    Perhaps in the future with newer fue techniques and scar therapy this will become more viable as there are people that suffer with the aftermath of these scars after losing more hair or having transplant failure. I have seen real life examples of this and I feel for these people.

     

    Of course, fut yields the most grafts with the most variation which is why it is used. You can get a relatively close cut with fut but certainly not a tight cut or a fade. I wasn't informed very well about this pre-op years ago and I wish I had been. Thankfully, it's not a problem for me, currently.

×
×
  • Create New...