- Haircut or shave?
- [laconically] Yeah.
- I beg your pardon, isn't your name Flugg?
- Yeah.
- I thought so. I didn't recognize your face when you first came in.
- [deadpan] No, it's all healed up since I was in here last.
- [laconically] Yeah.
- I beg your pardon, isn't your name Flugg?
- Yeah.
- I thought so. I didn't recognize your face when you first came in.
- [deadpan] No, it's all healed up since I was in here last.
(“The Barber Shop”, 1933)
Back in days visiting a barber shop regularly was a habit.
Men stopped in for a hot shave or a haircut, in ancient days
- for dentistry or surgery.
Actually, it was kind of a hangout: “a barber gives
you a quick shave if you don't have time to listen to a haircut”. Some featured
bars, like Boston’s famous Joe & Nemo, allowing them to keep up with
saloons.
Since long hair became unisex, getting hair done every
couple of weeks became optional. Modern times shaved beards from men's faces
with the safety razors. Overnight stubble quickly goes away with a help of
an electric shaver, usually tucked into the car's glove compartment. Long
beards and free time go hand in hand. Man drinks, eats, shaves in the car,
sometimes fearless of road signals.
Give it a break - stop on red, stop shaving in the car, stop
in for a shave.
Barber shops are still around, but, we bet, not like the one
we “discovered” around New Year Eve in Indianapolis. We literally stopped on “Red’s”.
Window Poster |
Barber at Work |
Koken Barber Chair |
Let your shoes speak for you:
Shoe Shine Bench & Stands |
He works here, he is from Savannah and he knows it all. All you have to do is to ask ... just ask about the place and just listen to a shoe shine:
Thanks for the hint!
ReplyDeleteNice images, BTW.