DIY Guide To Cutting Different Boys Haircuts At Home

Image1

Meta Description: Boys haircuts are versatile. This easy DIY guide teaches you how to do different hairstyles like fades, pomps, faux hawks, and more.

DIY For Popular Boys Haircuts

Keeping boys looking sharp with a fresh haircut sometimes feels like a weekly chore. Frequent trims are a must between their active lifestyles and rapidly growing locks. Doing it yourself at home saves time and money you could spend getting boys haircuts from the barber.

But properly cutting popular boys styles like fades, textured crops, pomps, and faux hawks takes skill. Don’t just blindly buzz their heads without a plan. Use this DIY tutorial of pro boy’s cutting tips to master stylish boys haircuts.

Gather The Proper Tools

Invest in professional shears explicitly designed for cutting hair. Quality matters for shears. Avoid attempting precision boys haircuts with rusty kitchen scissors. Choose styles made for edging and texturizing.

Purchase clippers suited for close cutting and fading. Opt for cordless clippers to make maneuvering around a wiggly boy easy. And get clips, combs, and brushes specifically for sectioning and styling hair.

Always keep tools only for haircutting separate. Disinfect all tools before and after use with rubbing alcohol. Dull tools won’t slice hair cleanly. Sharp, quality instruments make all the difference.

Work In Good Lighting

Attempting to cut hair in poor lighting usually doesn’t end well. Place your DIY barber chair near a sizeable, clean window to utilize natural light. Or install a bright adjustable lamp overhead.  

Eliminate shadows by positioning light sources in front and behind you, shining toward the head. It would help if you had clear visibility to see lengths and layers as you cut. Don’t just “wing it” in dim lighting.

For extra help seeing, have your boy wet his hair before cutting. The saturated strands cling together, giving you a better view of the shape. Proper lighting prevents choppy mistakes.

Image2

Know Key Haircutting Terms

Familiarize yourself with standard haircutting vocabulary to follow boys’ style tutorials properly. Know what terms like fade, textured top, side part, and taper refer to visually.

Watch tutorials to see each technique and style instead of guessing. When you know what a “high and tight” military cut entails, achieving it yourself becomes more manageable through step-by-step guidance.

Work In Sections

Cutting a boy’s entire head of hair simultaneously results in inconsistent lengths and layers. Sectioning creates controllable segments to focus on individually. Start on the top, then sides and back, and finish with precision edging.

Use clips to section hair. Cutting the crown first lets you see how the longer top layers lay and blend. Always work symmetrically, doing one side and then the other to match.

Remove clips and shake out hair frequently to check progress. Sectioning prevents you from getting overwhelmed trying to cut all the hair at once. Work methodically through each area.

Follow A Checklist

Print out checklist templates organized by boys haircut style to follow during home cuts. According to LoveHairstyles, these outline step-by-step instructions from tools needed to section tips in an easy-to-follow sequence.

Download free printable DIY boy’s haircut checklists online. Select ones providing visuals for extra guidance matching length and techniques. Customize by adding your notes.

See Also
Image1

Hang your customized checklist near your DIY cutting station. Glance at it often to keep your process on track. Checklists prevent forgetting key steps when learning new cuts.

Image3

Take It Down A Guard

Use clipper guards to control closeness when fading, undercutting, or buzzing the sides and back. But start longer, then gradually go shorter using lower guards. You can always take off more length.

Attach a #4 guard to start and cut all over. Then, use a #3 and repeat cutting. Work down guard sizes slowly, checking as you go. Stop when you’ve achieved the closeness desired.

Starting longer prevents cutting hair too short and too fast. Build confidence in identifying ideal fade and taper lengths by working downward with guards. It’s a precise process.

Angle Blades For Uniform Layers

Holding shears perfectly perpendicular to the head when layering top hair can remove too much density. Instead, slightly angle blades up and point cut for evenness.

Use the tip of the shear blades to snip shorter face-framing sections. This creates soft, blended layers versus blunt lines. Point cutting removes small amounts for natural graduation.

Go slowly and follow your angle guide. Comb hair flat between cuts to check progress and consistency. Angled blades encourage smooth layers on round boys’ heads.

What's Your Reaction?
Excited
0
Happy
0
In Love
0
Not Sure
0
Silly
0

COPYRIGHT 2022 WHATUTALKINGBOUTWILLIS.COM. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Scroll To Top