Haircutting 

163 creative works found

  • Scarification is a means of permanently marking the skin by cutting alone, without the use of pigments. The scars may be lighter or darker than your original skin tone and may raise up (keloid scarring). There are many ways to produce a scar but the cut must always penetrate the dermis if a scar is to be produced. The result depends as much on your skin as the method used. Black skin in particular is very good at producing pronounced keloid scars and this is a popular alternative to tattooing for people with very dark skin, for whom a tattoo might not show up very well. In many parts of Africa these scars are marks of beauty and a way to identify someone belonging to a particular group. Scarification also may mark one’s status as a civilized being, adult, or member of a specific ethnic group or initiation association. I spend a day in his school in a remote village of Benin to work on the Art in All of Us activities (www.artinallofus.org). I had really a great time thanks to the kids creativity. Please see some of their works on Benin Gallery ! hope you enjoy !! All proceeds from sales of pictures will go to the art education project of Art in All of Us (WWW.ARTINALLOFUS.ORG)

  • Same photo of the Barber Shop – in color this time

  • Sales of this Design? – 4 sales so far :) / / Framed (no glass) / Frame size 74cm x 55cm / Artwork 60cm x 46cm / approximately Hidden Treasure is a mixed media production on hardboard. Included in the mix are moulding paste for the eggs, gold and bronze paint, silver thread, fabric, charcoal, ink, pastel and acrylic with a gloss varnish over the eggs. / There is a poem in the background in gold cursive handwriting, which reads: Hidden Treasure Golden eggs are not always easy to find / Sometimes they lay hidden in the pockets of our seams / Sometimes we have to look beyond the obvious to see / the beauty in others~ traits of kindness, compassion, nurture and / gentleness are not always obvious at first glance and / what one may perceive as a fault or weakness / may actually be a great strength. Karin Taylor

  • 100% digital free. 4×5 b&w film + darkroom

  • Taken in Oshkosh,WI on location for the filming of Public Enemies with Johnny Depp and Christian Bale. / / Please View Larger

  • Mouse drawn on the computer

  • Little Italy, downtown Cleveland

  • Looking at the stars…., it is what the kids did during our Art in All of Us (www.artinallofus.org) activities in their tiny village in Congo last year !!!

  • Little India, Singapore

  • Kate got her hair cut and I somehow found myself drawing it last night. Watercolour and ink on watercolour paper. / This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.5 Australia License

  • Just a trim today thank you Mr Todd / .

  • This small town barber shop has been in existence for almost sixty years; my father, 84 years young, is still at the helm, taking care of his clientele who prefer Daddy’s skills (and conversation) to the modern day, slick salons and spas. Here’s the old pro giving a trim to his great-grandson who was in town for the holidays. Visiting Daddy’s barbershop is like a step back in time; it may not be full of fancy products or have fashionable decor, but it’s got character and the old gents who congregate there have interesting stories to tell and rich, abundant lives to share. I feel much more at home there than in the sleek salons.

  • Some of you may have seen an earlier post of my 84 year old father cutting my 5 year old grandson’s hair. Sandy Stewart gave me the idea to add this image (a different shot) in sepia tones. I also added the diffuse glow filter to give the image a “look back in time” feel to it. Thanks, Sandy, for your suggestion; it was a good one! My father, a WWII veteran who survived the sinking of the Yorktown in the South Pacific, has been cutting hair since post war days. He has a collection of sweet potato labels which are scattered throughout his shop and a ton of other memorabilia on the walls. If you View Larger, you’ll see to Daddy’s left a photo of him cutting my son’s hair. My son, who is now 33 years old, was probably about the same age as my grandson in that picture. When Daddy showed my son the finished haircut by producing a little hand held mirror, Tom always put his hands over his eyes. He was too shy to see his cute little self up close like that! I love the way the generations are documented here and the way Paw Paw Taylor, as my son and grandson call him, is shown still working and still enjoying it in his golden years of life. Hope you like this image, “The way it was and still is . . .” Another view: /

  • The Man, The Crook, The Hair

  • ©2008, Acrylic and paper transfer. Get a haircut and get a real job, like your big brother Bob.

  • I took this one in August 2008 when I was on vacation trip to a Zoo called Furuvik in Sweden. /

  • Black Lahu girls with traditional hairstyles in a remote village near the Thai-Burmese border. Originally from southern China, related groups of people speaking Lahu, a Tibeto-Burman language, have lived in Laos, Burma and Thailand for more than 100 years. The original shot was taken in 1979 with a Nikon FM2 and negative film, in natural light.

  • Driving to a local park this morning, I noticed this “HIPPIE” just hanging out near the road doing nothing. Well, being the free spirit that I am , I immediately had to stop to introduce myself, and take his picture:) P.S. For any 60’s or 70’s type redbubblers out there in the world…..no pun intended:) / / GENERAL INFORMATION: / The donkey or ass, Equus africanus asinus, is a domesticated member of the Equidae or horse family, and an odd-toed ungulate. The wild ancestor of the donkey is the African Wild Ass, E. africanus. Traditionally, the scientific name for the donkey is Equus asinus asinus based on the principle of priority used for scientific names of animals. However, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature has ruled in 2003 that if the domestic species and the wild species are considered subspecies of each other, the scientific name of the wild species has priority, even when that subspecies has been described after the domestic subspecies. This means that the proper scientific name for the donkey is Equus africanus asinus when it is considered a subspecies, and Equus asinus when it is considered a species. In the western United States, a small donkey is sometimes called a burro (from the Spanish word for the animal). A male donkey or ass is called a jack, a female a jenny, and offspring less than one year old, a foal (male: colt, female filly). While different species of the Equidae family can interbreed, offspring are almost always sterile. Nonetheless, horse/donkey hybrids are popular for their durability and vigor. A mule is the offspring of a jack (male donkey) and a mare (female horse). The much rarer successful mating of a male horse and a female donkey produces a hinny. Asses were first domesticated around 3000 BC, approximately the same time as the horse, and have spread around the world. They continue to fill important roles in many places today and domesticated species are increasing in numbers, but the African wild ass and another relative, the Onager, are endangered. As “beasts of burden” and companions, asses and donkeys have worked together with humans for centuries.

  • A Black Lahu man in northwest Thailand gives his grimacing daughter a traditional haircut with a sharp knife. He will leave a clump of hair on her crown. Lahu speakers live in the mountains of Yunnan province, China, their original homeland, but have spread to Laos, Burma and Thailand seeking new forest to clear for their dry rice, corn and opium poppy fields. This photo was taken in 1979 with a Nikon FM2 and kodachrome slide film. Black Lahu children in Thailand now attend schools and no longer have traditional hairstyles. They have also given up chewing and smoking tobacco. Elderly women however continue to live as they always have.

  • Blue rollerball on copier paper. A portrait of beautiful Selkie, whose work I admire very much – image used with permission.

  • Another very fine specimen of a Highland coo…... Featured in Highland & Island Photographers / Winner of this Challenge

  • A common ritual in India called Mundan, when a boy at the age of odd years is shaved off. A cermony of fun and joy! Nikon D70, Lense 18-70, Nikkor.

  • Best View Larger Featured in First Things group. / 2x’s-Featured in ImageWriting group. / Featured in Canon DSLR (One Image Per Day & A Canon Camera Must Be In The Description Before It’s Accepted) / group. Taken at the Troy Farm Musuem festival on 09/20/2009. The trustees wanted me to take pictures of the festival so they could have postcards for purchasing. I donated my work. Canon 50D / Sigma 17-70mm lens / Canon 430 flash / Flash Diffuser / shutter speed 1/90sec / f-5.6 / ISO 800 / Tripod /

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