Regular haircut

A regular haircut is a men's and boys' hairstyle that has combable length on top, a defined or deconstructed side part, and a short, semi-short, medium, long, or extra long back and sides. The style is also known by other names including taper cut, regular taper cut, side-part and standard haircut; as well as short back and sides, business-man cut and professional cut, subject to varying national, regional, and local interpretations of the specific taper for the back and sides.

Elements of a haircut

The essential elements of a regular haircut are edging, siding and topping:

  • Edging refers to the design of the lower edge of hair growth from the sideburns around the ears and across the nape of the neck.
  • Siding refers to the design of the hair on the back and sides between the edge and the top. Edging and siding, together or separately, commonly referred to as tapering, create a taper (see crew cut).
  • Topping refers to the design of the hair at the front and over the crown.
  • Edging comes first, followed by siding and topping. Edging is typically done with clippers; siding, shears over comb; topping, shears over finger. There are other methods that can be utilized including all clipper cuts, all shears cuts and all razor cuts. Barbers distinguish between a two line haircut and a one line haircut. Two line haircuts are standard taper cuts. The hair is outlined around the ears and then straight down the sides of the neck.

    Hairstyle

    A hairstyle, hairdo, or haircut refers to the styling of hair, usually on the human scalp. The fashioning of hair can be considered an aspect of personal grooming, fashion, and cosmetics, although practical, cultural, and popular considerations also influence some hairstyles. The oldest known depiction of hair braiding dates back about 30,000 years. In ancient civilizations, women's hair was often elaborately and carefully dressed in special ways. In Imperial Rome, women wore their hair in complicated styles. From the time of the Roman Empire until the Middle Ages, most women grew their hair as long as it would naturally grow. During the Roman Empire as well as in the 16th century in the western world, women began to wear their hair in extremely ornate styles. In the later half of the 15th century and on into the 16th century a very high hairline on the forehead was considered attractive. During the 15th and 16th centuries, European men wore their hair cropped no longer than shoulder-length. In the early 17th century male hairstyles grew longer, with waves or curls being considered desirable.

    Haircut (album)

    Haircut is a studio album released by George Thorogood. It was released in 1993 on Capitol Records. The album peaked at #120 on the Billboard 200.

    Track listing

  • "Get a Haircut" (David Avery, Bill Birch) - 4:12
  • "Howlin' for My Baby" (Willie Dixon, Howlin' Wolf) - 5:14
  • "Killer's Bluze" (Dex Rogers) - 6:10
  • "Down in the Bottom" (Dixon) - 4:03
  • "I'm Ready" (Dixon) - 3:36
  • "Cops and Robbers" (Bo Diddley) - 4:50
  • "Gone Dead Train" (Jack Nitzsche, Russ Titelman) - 4:07
  • "Want Ad Blues" (John Lee Hooker) - 5:06
  • "My Friend Robert" (Patrick Sky) - 2:30
  • "Baby Don't Go" (George Thorogood) - 3:24
  • Personnel

    The following personnel are credited on the album:

  • Peter Bagge - cover art
  • Billy Blough - bass
  • Hank Carter - keyboards, saxophone, background vocals
  • Delaware Destroyers - producer
  • Bob Ludwig - mastering
  • Terry Manning - producer, engineer, mixing
  • Henry Marquez - art direction
  • Jeff Simon - drums
  • George Thorogood - guitar, vocals
  • References

    Haircut (film)

    Haircut (Portuguese: Corte de Cabelo) is an independent Portuguese drama film directed by Joaquim Sapinho, produced at Rosa Filmes, which was nominated for the Golden Leopard at the 1995 Locarno International Film Festival.

    Reception

    Being nominated for the Golden Leopard at the 1995 Locarno International Film Festival, Haircut also won the award for best film at the 1996 Angers European Film Festival, and the Best Actress Award for Carla Bolito at the Geneva Film Festival. In its home country, Haircut was highly acclaimed both by the critic and by the audience in an unprecedented way for Portugal. It was considered the best depiction of the Portuguese youth of the nineties captured on film. The Brazilian newspaper Estado de São Paulo called it the first post-modern Portuguese film.

    Production

    Haircut was not only the directorial debut of Portuguese director Joaquim Sapinho, but also the film debut for most of the cast and crew of the film. Haircut became famous even before having been shot, for its long pre-production, which consisted on thousands of casting calls, which would finally end with the finding of the leading lady Carla Bolito. The film was shot in a series of popular locations in Lisbon where, however, no film had ever been shot before, like the 1960s expressionist Mexicana café (architect Jorge Ferreira Chaves), the 1980s post-modern shopping center Amoreiras or the Príncipe Real Garden where, some years later, the final scene of João César Monteiro's film Vai e Vem would be shot.

    Regular

    The term regular can mean normal or in accordance with rules. It may refer to:

    Organizations

  • Regular Army for military usage
  • Regular clergy, members of a religious order subject to a rule of life
  • Regular Force for usage in the Canadian Forces
  • Regular Masonic jurisdictions, or regularity, refers to the constitutional mechanism by which Freemasonry Grand Lodges or Grand Orients give one another mutual recognition
  • Entertainment

  • Regular Show, an animated television series
  • The Regular Guys, a radio morning show based out of Atlanta, Georgia
  • Regular Joe, the second studio album by American country music artist Joe Diffie
  • Language

  • Regular inflection, the formation of derived forms such as plurals in ways that are typical for the language
  • Regular verb
  • Regular script, the newest of the Chinese script styles
  • Mathematics

    There is an extremely large number of unrelated notions of "regularity" in mathematics.

    Algebra and number theory

    (See also the geometry section for notions related to algebraic geometry.)

    Regular polygon

    In Euclidean geometry, a regular polygon is a polygon that is equiangular (all angles are equal in measure) and equilateral (all sides have the same length). Regular polygons may be convex or star. In the limit, a sequence of regular polygons with an increasing number of sides becomes a circle, if the perimeter is fixed, or a regular apeirogon, if the edge length is fixed.

    General properties

    These properties apply to all regular polygons, whether convex or star.

    A regular n-sided polygon has rotational symmetry of order n.

    All vertices of a regular polygon lie on a common circle (the circumscribed circle), i.e., they are concyclic points. That is, a regular polygon is a cyclic polygon.

    Together with the property of equal-length sides, this implies that every regular polygon also has an inscribed circle or incircle that is tangent to every side at the midpoint. Thus a regular polygon is a tangential polygon.

    A regular n-sided polygon can be constructed with compass and straightedge if and only if the odd prime factors of n are distinct Fermat primes. See constructible polygon.

    Ass (album)

    Ass is the fourth studio album by British rock band Badfinger, and their last album released on Apple Records. The opening track, "Apple of My Eye", refers to the band leaving the label to begin its new contract with Warner Bros. Records. The cover artwork, showing a donkey chasing a distant carrot, alludes to Badfinger's feelings that they had been misled by Apple over the years. The cover was painted by Grammy Award-winning artist Peter Corriston, who would later create album covers for Led Zeppelin (Physical Graffiti) and the Rolling Stones (Some Girls, Tattoo You).

    Recording and release delays

    Although recordings for the album began as early as 1972, shortly after the release of Straight Up, Ass wasn't released until 26 November 1973 in the US and May 1974 in the UK. The album was originally delayed because of production quality, as the band attempted to produce the album themselves after producer Todd Rundgren departed the project with just two songs recorded. After a first version of the album was rejected by the label, Apple engineer Chris Thomas was hired as a first-time producer to improve the overall recordings and make new track selections.

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