A Photo For My Museum of Hair History

This 1930’s hairdryer is my latest flea market find and is now displayed in my photo museum of hair history on my website.

Helene Curtis dryer 001
Helene Curtis has been around since 1927.

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.

Cosmetology

book-cover04

Do you really want to know what it’s like to be a cosmetologist?

After being in the cosmetology business for thirty three years I think I’ve learned a thing or two.

My novel, Towel Dry and a Good Cry, a kindle book, is my interpretation of what it’s like to really stand behind the chair of a hairdresser.

Being a cosmetologist is not just about cutting hair and beauty school doesn’t prepare you for the real world of dealing with the public and being a confessor.

 Towel Dry and a Good Cry  will walk you through the life of, Josie Capelli, a new to the business hairdresser in the early 1980’s, her crazy best friend and her drama filled Italian family.

Cosmetologists, world-wide, would agree it doesn’t matter what country you live in the hairdresser/client dynamic is always the same.

I invite you to join Josie as she navigates her life as a cosmetologist in the eighties through laughter and tears with this heartfelt story about truth and trust and love with a tangled web of characters. Some you’ll love some you’ll hate and some will leave your jaw hanging open!  Watch the book trailer:  www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

And as John Steinbeck so eloquently put it in this quote, is my sentiment exactly.

comment on hairdressers Steinbeck

The Beauty Industry

book-cover04

Do you really want to know what it’s like to be in the beauty industry?

After being in the beauty industry for thirty three years I think I’ve learned a thing or two.

My novel, Towel Dry and a Good Cry, a kindle book, is my interpretation of the beauty industry and what it’s like to really stand behind the chair of a hairdresser.

Being a hairdresser working in the beauty industry is not just about cutting hair and beauty school doesn’t prepare you for the real world of dealing with the public and being a confessor.

 Towel Dry and a Good Cry  will walk you through the life of, Josie Capelli, a new to the business hairdresser in the early 1980’s, her crazy best friend and her drama filled Italian family.

Hairdressers in the beauty industry, world-wide, would agree it doesn’t matter what country you live in the hairdresser/client dynamic is always the same.

I invite you to join Josie as she navigates her life as a hairdresser in the eighties through laughter and tears with this heartfelt story about truth and trust and love with a tangled web of characters. Some you’ll love some you’ll hate and some will leave your jaw hanging open!  Watch the book trailer:  www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

And as John Steinbeck so eloquently put it in this quote, is my sentiment exactly.

comment on hairdressers Steinbeck

Hairdresser

Do you really want to know what it’s like to be a hairdresser?

book-cover04

After being in the hairdressing business for thirty three years I think I’ve learned a thing or two.

My novel, Towel Dry and a Good Cry, a kindle bookis my interpretation of what it’s like to really stand behind the chair.

Being a hairdresser is not just about cutting hair.  Beauty school doesn’t prepare the hairdresser for the real world of dealing with the public and being a confessor.

 Towel Dry and a Good Cry  will walk you through the life of, Josie Capelli, the main character, a new to the business hairdresser in the early eighties, her crazy best friend and her drama filled Italian family.

Hairdressers world-wide would agree it doesn’t matter what country you live in the hairdresser/client dynamic is always the same.

I invite you to join Josie as she navigates her life as a hairdresser in the eighties through laughter and tears in this heartfelt story about truth, trust and love with a tangled web of characters.  Some you’ll love some you’ll hate and some will leave your jaw hanging open!  Watch the book trailer:  www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

And as John Steinbeck so eloquently put it in this quote, is my sentiment exactly.

comment on hairdressers Steinbeck

Something important

Here is something I think is important.  I’ve actually found a melanoma on a clients scalp.  She was eternally grateful I did.

We here at Shots have  long considered our trips to the hair salon to be good for our mental health: A  pampering head massage in the shampoo chair can be amazingly  relaxing.

Public officials think hair stylists could play a vital role in physical health, too, by helping spot potentially cancerous skin lesions on their clients’ scalp, neck and face. Research published Monday in the Archives of Dermatology suggests some stylists and barbers are already informally performing these skin cancer exams on clients.

In a survey of 203 Houston-area hair salon workers, 58 percent of respondents told researchers from Harvard’s School of Public Health that they had urged a client at least once to get a mole checked out by a medical professional.

“Almost every dermatologist I’ve talked to anecdotally has said to me, Yes, I’ve had a melanoma case referred to me by a hair professional,” Alan Geller, a senior lecturer at Harvard and study co-author, tells Shots.

Hairdressers and barbers tend to enjoy an easy rapport with clients, see them regularly and often share advice with them. All of which explains why, over the years, public health officials have recruited salon workers’ help in various health awareness campaigns — such as encouraging women to seek mammograms and men to get prostate screenings. Many of these efforts have focused on reaching minority communities.

Getting hair salons to help in the fight against head and neck cancers made a lot of sense to Geller and his colleagues:  Stylists and barbers spend much of their time staring at their clients’ scalps and necks. Over a lifetime, these areas receive a ton of exposure to the sun’s UV rays.

More than 80 percent of the most common types of skin cancers — squamous cell carcinomas and basal cell carcinomas — occur on the scalp, neck and face. And melanomas, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, tend to be “disproportionately fatal” on the scalp, Geller says, perhaps because an exhaustive exam of the head and hair isn’t a standard part of most visits to the doctor.

“We asked ourselves, who might be most predisposed to looking at the neck and face?” Gellar says. He and his colleagues wanted to know if hair professionals would be willing to receive more formal training in spotting different types of skin cancers; 49 percent of survey respondents said yes.

Even  without training, many of the hair care workers were already performing their own exams. The survey found 37 percent said they had checked out  more than half of their clients’ scalps in the month prior to the survey, which  was conducted in January 2010. About a third said they’d looked at more than  half of clients’ necks.

Geller and his colleagues are now working with the Melanoma Foundation of New England to develop a statewide program to train hair professionals in Massachusetts on how to recognize potential signs of skin cancer. It should be up and running later this year.

Geller acknowledges it’s possible some hair stylists may cause needless worry in clients by pointing out moles and lesions that turn out to be harmless. “I think the best way that we’re trying to reassure customers,” he says, “is to have hair professionals say, ‘I’m not an expert. But maybe the most important thing you can do is to see your doctor as soon as possible.’ ”

Judy DeLuca’s Latest Novel

Towel Dry and a Good Cry is about a young girl, new to the hairdressing business, that learns all too quick that there is more to standing behind the chair than just cutting hair.  A story full of laughs and tears lies and fears with characters you’ll love, hate or will leave your jaw hanging open!

Available at your favorite ebook store

www.youtube.com/toweldryandagoodcry

www.facebook.com/judydelucaauthor

Follow me on Pinterest for more beauty info and tips.