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Fashion for Geeks: Hair & Grooming

September 15, 2006 by Glenn 

In the post introducing why geeks should care about fashion, I concluded with:

The next article will cover the first and most important step. If you’ve got great clothes but don’t have this handled, you’ll simply look foolish.

That step would be your haircut and overall grooming. To help you understand their importance, let’s do another visualization exercise.

Imagine the guy dressed up in his Urban Outfitters threads. He’s looking good and has a bit of fashion sense.

UO

Now imagine the same guy, but replace it with this haircut:

Mullet
The image in your head should look completely ridiculous. A guy dressed up nicely, but he’s rocking a mullet? It would be obvious to women that this guy simply doesn’t “get it.”

The lesson here is that hair and grooming are first — the clothes come second.

Some haircuts clearly look better than others, and have a big effect on your attractiveness to women. As a quick and dirty experiment, I asked women which picture of Colin Farrell they liked best:

1
Colin 1

2

Colin 2

3

Colin 3

Some liked the first and some liked the third. But none liked the second Miami Vice “stringy-greasy” look. It’s clearly not as attractive as the other two.

So get a good haircut, ideally one that complements the shape of your head and face. This is why it’s important to find a good hair stylist. They’ll give you informed advice on what will look good, and keep you away from cuts that won’t.

If you don’t know a good stylist, check for a local “best of” guide in your city. For example, Denver’s Westword newsmagazine has a yearly Best of Denver. In it they list the best places for a haircut. Call up a couple and ask which stylist is the best at men’s haircuts — this should give you some leads.

If you don’t have something like this in your area, find a guy with good haircut and ask him where he gets it done. And remember, it doesn’t have to cost a fortune. I pay $20 plus tip for a cut at Moxie — considering how critical this factor is to your visual appearance, it’s easily worth the money.

As a final example, here’s my “hair evolution” over the past 10 months:

Hair Evolution

I would rarely get compliments about my long hair, but after I cut it, it was made very clear from women that I’d done the right thing. The whole bleached hair experiment… well, it’s gotten a mixed reception. ;)

GROOMING

Grooming is very, very important to women. This includes facial hair, body hair, fingernails and toenails. Basically, women equate your level of grooming with your level of cleanliness. Hippies aside, women want to be with a clean guy.

I admit I was confused for a bit about facial hair, and it was Johnny Depp that led me astray. Women would rave about how hot he is and say things like “oh my god he’s so beautiful,” but he always had patchy and odd-looking facial hair.

Mr Patchy

Depp Unshaved

I suspect he has weird facial hair because he’s almost “too pretty,” and tries to ugly himself up a bit.

Mr Pretty

Depp Shaved

Just keep in mind that Johnny’s the exception, not the rule.

There’s not a whole lot to grooming: keep your facial hair neat, consider getting a Philips Bodygroom, and keep the nails trimmed and clean. Women will thank you for it!

Comments

10 Responses to “Fashion for Geeks: Hair & Grooming”

  1. cash on September 15th, 2006 11:38 am

    “mr patchy”. Ha!

  2. greg cerveny on September 15th, 2006 12:02 pm

    Personally, I’m all about using pro products for my trimmers.

  3. cash on September 15th, 2006 12:48 pm

    I can vouch for the Norelco Body Groom

  4. cash on September 15th, 2006 12:49 pm

    Doh! I meant Phillips.

  5. j on September 16th, 2006 1:37 pm

    about grooming
    > I would rarely get compliments about my long hair, but after I cut it, it was
    > made very clear from women that I’d done the right thing.

    I got the opposite. I let my hair grow just for an experiment and I got tired of it because it looks good only if I spend some time on it, it doesn’t look good right out of the bed so I decided to cut it. Immediately every, but really every girl I know told me nooo, why did you cut your hair? you looked better before.

  6. Vincci on September 17th, 2006 9:23 pm

    j: Did your hair have some curl or maybe even a bit of a wave to it? Because I think that’s what makes the whole floppy, long hair look work on guys. From the photos, you can see that Glenn’s hair is pretty straight and he does look better with short hair.

    PS: I’m a chick reading a men’s blog… is that allowed?

  7. j on September 19th, 2006 5:16 am

    Vincci: you are right! my hair is not straight and I agree that he looks better this way.
    I think that sometimes you’ve got to experiment and maybe just once spend some more money on a expensive hair stylist to know what looks good on you. It’s not that one look suits everyone, different face types require different hair styles? maybe…

  8. mr skin on October 24th, 2006 5:37 pm

    Zoiks! Colling Farrell is one of the new spokespersons for the special olympics? That’s kinda strange. He’s getting over an addiction to pain killers and has a sex tape out. That’s pretty special if you ask me!

  9. Urban Outfitters on November 17th, 2006 11:24 pm

    Dave…

    Interesting topic… I’m working in this industry myself and I don’t agree about this in 100%, but I added your page to my bookmarks and hope to see more interesting articles in the future…

  10. Tech Geek on November 7th, 2007 11:23 am

    What about those of us with kinky,very curly or nappy hair?

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