A unique and exciting addition to your professional styling tools designed for fast and precise blending/texturing of all sorts.Ā Professional Thinning Shears Japanese Styles featuring superior workmanship and teeth variations that give you an edge. Try exceptionally engineered Thinning shears create a soft cut with rows of well-structured teeth. These instruments are hand-honed and hollow-ground for precision, strength and longevity. Or choose hair thinning shears with semi-convex blades featuring offset handles that cater to an open-hand cutting style. They shine with high quality sterling. Also in sterling, an amazingly lightweight shear with the beveled blade and offset handles. Hair thinning shears shouldn’t push or pull while lightening weight.Ā A 28-tooth,Ā micro-serrated blade helps prevent push withĀ super steelĀ dependability and removable, sizing insert flexibility. You can taper and blend beautifully with 44 teeth, brilliantly polished. Operate these shears thanks to a comfort-designed handle insert that aligns your thumb. We even have shears in left-handed styles! Our shear philosophy is simple: provide performance manufacturing at the perfect price.Ā Professional offers unrivalled durability and sharpness of blades that integratedĀ cutting edge for maximum sharpness, long cutting performance and perfect slice cutting. Thinning Shears Japanese Styles
Thinning shears areĀ scissors that have one blade with teeth and one blade without. These teeth are little grooves on the blade that will quickly take your hair out in even sections to help alleviate excess weight, soften lines, and blend between sections.
What Are Hair Thinning Shears?
Thinning shears are scissors that have one blade with teeth and one blade without. These teeth are little grooves on the blade that will quickly take your hair out in even sections to help alleviate excess weight, soften lines, and blend between sections.
“Donāt use thinning shears to build the shape, use them to ‘decorate’ the shape you created,” says LA-based hairstylist Jay Small. These shears are a secondary tool to any haircut and should not be used to achieve your overall shape or structure in the hair. “When using thinning shears, it should only be for the last 10% of the haircut,” Small tells us.
Types of Hair Thinning Shears
“There are three types [of thinning shears],” says celebrity hairstylist Sunnie Brook Jones. One can be used for texturizing and blending, one for chunkier weight removal, and one for finishing, she explains. The main differentiating trait to thinning shears is the amount of teeth they have. Some teeth are set wider apart, and some are spaced much closer together. The significance of the number of teeth your shear has will inform how it’s used.
Smaller teeth are best used to blend and soften blunt lines. “The finer the tooth, the more blended and even the weight removal will be,” says Small. These finer tooth shear options are your texturizing shears and finishing shears. “Finishing shears have 15-22 teeth, and texturizing shears will have about 25 teeth [or more],” Brook explains. “They create a soft finish on the ends of the hair and give “heavy” hair more of an airy movement.”