What’s in her dry cut?
Sunday, 11 February 2007Something interesting piqued my interest when I was reviewing this website featuring indepth daily soap opera updates, exclusive soap star interviews with late-breaking news articles. It wasn’t about soap operas per se, but rather about the hairstyle of Mary Beth Evan in Days of Our Lives.
A viewer who loved that sassy, sexy hairstyle wrote in to ask for a front and back picture of Mary Beth’s hairstyle and how it could be achieved. Soaps.com was very obliging and supplied the pictures on their website, in addition to information on the cut.
I should make mention that Mary Beth’s cut is a dry cut, and is not a regular cut. She has mentioned that her stylist is very creative. I hope that your hair type is right for the cut!
What in the world is a dry cut? I did a search on the net and found some very interesting information.
Apparently, with the dry cut method, the hair is cut dry instead of wet like it usually is. This allows the stylists to carve out shapes that are impossible with wet hair as they are able to cut individual strands of dry hair and not big clumps of wet hair. As a result, the stylists can see the final look right from the beginning and they know exactly how the hair falls, creating a natural shape according to the way your hair grows. But compared to a wet cut where the hair ends are more visable and therefore easier to make clean cuts, a dry cut may mean the hair ends could become more blunt.
I haven’t had my hair cut using this method but I think it’s definitely worth a try. Imagine. With the dry cut, the whole experience becomes an interactive one and I can actually see my hair taking form with each snip of the scissors.
Anyway I’ve got soaps.com to thank for leading me to this piece of information. It’s great that the entertainment website is so friendly in handling readers’ requests. And based on what I’ve seen, I would certainly like to get a Mary Beth Evan haircut myself too!
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February 13th, 2007 at 3:58 pm
Leong did that for me when I was still sporting short sassy hair. The downside is sometimes it hurts when his scissors are not sharp enough and will tug at the hair, especially when he uses the slicing pair. Man, can die on the spot. Wet is still better.
DR: Ouch. That does sound painful. Hmm…I must ask my hairstylist about it. Now that I think harder, I vaguely recall he did it once for me but it was because he was in a hurry. I couldn’t really tell the difference I think. Otherwise I would have remember it clearly.