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51 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
ANGLE
Space between two lines or surfaces that intersect at a given point.
APEX
Highest point on the top of the head.
BANG (FRINGE)
Triangular section that begins at the apex and ends at the front corners.
BEVELING
Technique using diagonal lines by cutting hair ends with a slight increase or decrease in length.
BLUNT HAIRCUT
Haircut which all the hair comes to one hanging level, forming a weight line or area; hair is cut with no elevation or over-direction; also referred to as a one-length, zero-elevation, or no-elevation cut.
CARVING
Haircutting technique done by placing the still blade into the hair and resting it on the scalp, and then moving the shears through the hair while opening and partially closing the shears.
CLIPPER-OVER-COMB
Haircutting technique similar to scissor-over-comb, except that the clippers move side to side across the comb rather than bottom to top.
CROSS-CHECKING
Parting the haircut in the opposite way from which you cut it, to check for precision of line and shape.
CROWN
Area of the head between the apex and back of the parietal ridge.
CUTTING LINE
Angle at which the fingers are held when cutting, and ultimately the line that is cut; also known as finger angle, finger position, cutting position, cutting angle.
DISTRIBUTION
Where and how hair is moved over the head.
ELEVATION
Angle or degree at which a subsection of hair is held, or lifted, from the head when cutting; also referred to as projection or lifting.
FOUR CORNERS
Points on the head that signal a change in the shape of the head, from flat to round or vice versa.
FREE-HAND NOTCHING
Notching technique in which pieces of hair are snipped out at random intervals.
FREE-HAND SLICING
Technique used to release weight from the subsection, allowing the hair to move more freely.
GRADUATED HAIRCUT
Graduated shape or wedge; an effect or haircut that results from cutting the hair with tension, low to medium elevation or over direction.
GRADUATION
Elevation occurs when a section is lifted above 0 degrees.
GROWTH PATTERN
Direction in which the hair grows from the scalp; also referred to as natural fall or natural falling position.
GUIDELINE
Section of hair, located either at the perimeter or the interior of the cut, that determines the length the hair will be cut; also referred to as a guide; usually the first section that is cut to create a shape.
HAIRLINE
Hair that grows at the outermost perimeter along the face, around the ears, and on the neck.
HEAD FORM
Shape of hte head, which greatly affects the way the hair falls and behaves; also called head shape.
INTERIOR
Inner or internal part.
INTERIOR GUIDELINE
Guideline that is inside the haircut rather than on the perimeter.
LAYERED HAIRCUT
Graduated effect achieved by cutting the hair with elevation or over-direction; the hair is cut at higher elevations, usually 90 degrees or above, which removes weight.
LAYERS
Create movement and volume in the hair by releasing weight.
LINE
Thin continuous mark used as a guide; can be straight or curved, horizontal, vertical, or diagonal.
LONG-LAYERED HAIRCUT
Haircut in which the hair is cut at a 180 degree angle; the resulting shape has shorter layers at the top and increasingly longer layers toward the perimeter.
NAPE
Back part of the neck; the hair below the occipital bone.
NOTCHING
Version of point cutting in which the tips of the scissors are moved toward the hair ends rather than into them; creates a chunckier effect.
OVER-DIRECTION
Combing a section away from its natural falling position, rather than straight out from the head, toward a guideline; used to create increasing lengths in the interior or perimeter.
PALM-TO-PALM
Cutting position in which the palms of both hands are facing each other.
PARIETAL RIDGE
Widest area of the head, usually starting at the temples and ending at the bottom of the crown.
PART/PARTING
Line dividing the hair to the scalp that separates one section of hair from another or creates subsections.
PERIMETER
Outer line of a hairstyle.
POINT CUTTING
Haircutting technique in which the tips of the shears are used to cut "points" into the ends of the hair.
RAZOR-OVER-COMB
Texturizing technique in which the comb and the razor are used on the surface of the hair.
RAZOR ROTATION
Texturing technique similar to razor-over-comb, done with small circular motions.
REFERENCE POINTS
Points on the head that mark where the surface of the head changes or the behavior of the hair changes, such as ears, jawline, occipital bone, apex, and so on; used to establish design lines that are proportionate.
SECTIONS
To divide the hair by parting into uniform working areas for control.
SCISSOR-OVER-COMB
Haircutting technique in which the hair is held in place with the comb while the tips of the scissors are used to remove the lengths.
SLICING
Technique that removes bulk and adds movement through the lengths of the hair; the shears are not completely closed, and only the portion of the blades near the pivot is used.
SLIDE CUTTING
Method f cutting or thinning the hair in which the fingers and shears glide along the edge of the hair to remove length.
SLITHERING (EFFILATING)
Process of thinning the hair to graduate lengths with shears; cutting the hair with a sliding movement of the shears while keeping the blades partially opened; also called effilating.
STATIONARY GUIDELINE
Guideline that does not move.
SUBSECTIONS
Smaller sections within a larger section of hair, used to maintain control of the hair while cutting.
TAPERS
Haircutting effect in which there is an even blend from very short at the hairline to longer lengths as you move up the head; "to taper" is to narrow progressively at one end.
TENSION
Amount of pressure applied when combing and holding a section, created by stretching or pulling the section.
TEXTURIZING
Removing excess bulk without shortening the length; changing the appearance or behavior of the hair through specific haircutting techniques, using shears, thinning shears, or a razor.
TRAVELING GUIDELINE
Guideline that moves as the haircutting progresses, used often when creating layers or graduation.
UNIFORM LAYERS
Hair is elevated to 90 degrees from the scalp and cut at the same length.
WEIGHT LINE
Visual "line" in the haircut, where the ends of the hair hang together.