LOOK and beautyVISION trade fairs
The result and the process
What you'll learn
How to create a square shape that compensates for the asymmetry of the skull.
How to create a full mod-style haircut using only a Chinese razor.
How to style a hairstyle with a deliberate contrast between the top and the sides.
How to work with entire panels to speed up your workflow and build texture.
How to skillfully combine avant-garde coloring with a precise cut.
How to use the reverse triangle parting for even bang density.
LOOK and beautyVISION – Day 2 features a complete recording of the live demonstrations from the Poznań trade show, where four Connected Hair educators present their unique approaches to men’s hairstyling. This is not a course on a single technique, but an insight into four different work philosophies: from alternative styles with disconnection, through precise box cuts combined with avant-garde coloring, to haircuts performed entirely with a Chinese razor.
Vadim Futowsky, Piotr Adaszkiewicz, Miłosz Mikołajczak, and Kacper Orzechowski guide us through their creative processes in a trade show setting. You’ll see how an alternative hairstyle is created with a deliberate disconnect between the top and the sides, how a precise square cut builds volume and compensates for the skull’s asymmetry, and how a textured bob gains lightness and movement when the only cutting tool is a Chinese razor. This is a course for hairdressers seeking inspiration and a fresh perspective on the craft.
In this course, you'll learn:
- A full mod-style haircut done exclusively with Chinese scissors—from shaping to dry styling
- A detailed analysis of the skull as a starting point for constructing a square form that deliberately fills in the recesses and builds volume
- Working on entire side and back panels in a single pass as a way to speed up the process and create an irregular texture
- A deliberate color scheme (neon green, blue roots, dark panels) as an integral part of the hairstyle that accentuates the cut's lines
- An inverted triangle as a way to section the bangs to maintain even density across their entire width
- A combination of a square top with radial sections at the back of the head to create volume and a smooth, natural flow of hair
- Working live on stage – how top educators handle time pressure and the audience, explaining their decisions step by step
After watching this video, you’ll gain a fresh perspective on the techniques you already know and see how four different approaches to men’s hairstyling translate into specific decisions at the chair. It’s a dose of pure inspiration that will allow you to think outside the box and consciously experiment with shape, texture, and color in your daily salon work.
What's inside
Full access to the course
Planning a bangs cut
"The mushroom will definitely become detached from the side parts, because there is a clear preference."
Body position when cutting the left side
"I always try to stand somewhere in this area and simply ask the customer to tilt their head at a 45-degree angle."
How to find the midpoint
"I place the wood against the widest part at the top and at the back."
Another role of memory bandwidth
"The memory bank is used to transfer the length to the next bank. And I don't entirely agree with that."
When the quadratic formula doesn't work
"The basic theory of the square tells us to trim back to the previous strand. But that doesn't always work on the undercut section."
Custom color matching
"We'll leave the darker parts alone. We'll focus on the green parts."
Customizing the breakdown
"If we have a customer who's having trouble with the curves, that's exactly the approach I'll take."
A quick technique for cutting with a Chinese knife
"With a single stroke, I can achieve the desired shape without cutting off too much hair."