Archive for July, 2006

SmartStyle opens at Wal-Mart

BY ROGER LARSEN
SmartStyle Family Hair Salon, one of the fastest-growing divisions of the Regis Corporation, opens today in the new Huron Wal-Mart Supercenter.

Manager Melinda Salas and five other stylists will provide cuts, colors, permanents, chemical relaxers and facial waxing.
“We’re just really excited to be in Huron,” she said.
SmartStyle is one of the tenants of the Wal-Mart store, which also opens this morning at 2791 Dakota Ave. S.
It is a full-service salon with professional hair care products. Appointments are not necessary.
Hours will be 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays.
SmartStyle has about 1,100 locations around the country, exclusively in Wal-Mart stores.
Salas has been with the company off and on for the past five years, coming to Huron from the Mitchell store.
The other stylists are also originally from the Huron area. Three are transferring here from SmartStyle locations in North Dakota and Watertown.

Add comment July 27th, 2006

Cost Cutters clips ribbon, hair at opening

New salon to provide quick, affordable hair care to Park City
SKYLER BELL, Of the Record staff

Many people who come to Park City as vacationers end up as full-time Parkites down the road, but most don’t have to pull an occupational 180 in order to do so.

Corey and Debra DeCamp did. They went from the aerospace industry in California to the insurance industry in Arizona, and are now opening a hair salon in Utah.

The DeCamps will open a Cost Cutters Salon as franchisees of the Regis Corporation. Regis runs 950 stores nationwide as Cost Cutters, SuperCuts, Trade Secrets and Regis Salons.

“We had been coming here for years as skiers and just fell in love with the area,” Debra said. “We wanted to raise our kids here so we hunted around for a business concept that we felt was needed in the community and that we were excited about. When we found this franchise that has been doing so well in the Midwest, Colorado and California that hadn’t been introduced here, we were excited to get on board.”

The store, located at Quarry Village in Park City, held its grand opening and ribbon cutting Friday morning.

Both Debra and Corey have experience in the business world, but their salon experience culminates with getting their own haircuts. But lack of experience is not slowing them down. Debra said they will focus on what they do well, and get better at the things they don’t.

Debra, whose career has always been in marketing and advertising, will take care of that side of the salon, while Corey will handle the business side. Corey will also continue to run the Farmer’s Insurance branch in Arizona that he’s been running for the last 12 years.

“My job as the owner, since I’m not a cosmetologist, is to find the best way to get our name out there,” Debra said. “So I’m in charge of all our marketing and I feel pretty well prepared to do that with my background. Corey is much more business oriented.”

The other DeCamps, Morgan, 5, and Madison, 7, are just as excited as their parents that Cost Cutters is opening. Debra said the two children started trying to get the chance to be the first haircut an honor the DeCamps decided will go to Park City Mayor Dana Williams.

“Personally I think he epitomizes a strong community and a family-oriented place,” Debra said. “We are very pleased with what he has done with this city and so we are honored to have him be the first cut at our store.

“But the girls are still excited to go get their hair done, I can tell you that. They both want to go in and have up-dos. Morgan has had her dress she wants to wear picked out for weeks.”

The girls might have another chance to be the first cut, because he Decamps signed a deal with Regis to open three stores in the greater Salt Lake area, so they will start two more in addition to the Park City location.

Debra said she and Corey chose Park City as the site for one of their three stores because the area needed a less-expensive, quicker option for hair.

“We’re a value-priced, no-appointment concept that offers full-service hair care for the whole family,” she said. “We do cuts, color and curl. We’re not a day-spa concept so we’re able to offer a high-quality product at a value price. When I want to get my haircut I don’t always have two hours to spend at a spa.”

Debra also said their goal is to have an unparalleled level of service at the store. Service, she said, is the key to any business.

“It’s a matter of how we treat each customer when they walk in the door,” she said. “Any customer who walks in the door should be special and feel that they’re being listened to in terms of their hair care. We’re there to make suggestions, but we’re also there to serve and to listen.”

The level of training provided by Regis, Corey said, was a big reason they chose to franchise with them.

“They really tailor their concept to each region of the market,” he said. “I am very confident it will turn out well. I’m excited about it. There’s such a demand and need out there.”

Cost Cutters, which is located at 3126 Quarry Road, Suite K, can be reached at (435) 645-0603. They are open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Adult cuts start at $13.95, kids cuts at $10.95, color at $34.95 and waxing at $9.95.

Add comment July 27th, 2006

Regis Corp. grooming for growth

The operator of Supercuts and Regis salons is formulating a new expansion plan. Part of that: hoping long hair goes out of style.

Neal St. Anthony, Star Tribune

It’s been a bad hair year for Regis Corp., the nation’s biggest barber, despite a $50 million breakup fee it received when a merger partner backed out this spring.

Regis, which operates under the Supercuts, Regis Salons, Cost Cutters and other shingles, also continues in what CEO Paul Finkelstein calls a “long-hair cycle” of late. That’s cut mature-store sales increases to less than 1 percent annually, compared with the plan of 2 to 4 percent.

The aborted merger and tough business climate have slowed the Edina-based company’s growth and caused it to refocus on the basics — and a belief that short-hair styles will come back in fashion.

“At this point, Regis had better come up with a plan to increase customers at their existing salons,” said Mariann Montagne Kotas, an analyst at Thrivent Asset Management, a Regis investor. “They’ve got to increase traffic. On the Academy Awards, nobody had short hair. They’re in quite a long-hair cycle.”

Regis, a successful consolidator of ma-and-pa shops and regional chains and barber schools, profitably grew from a stock worth about $5.25 when it went public under Finkelstein in 1991 to $45 per share in late 2004, when it peaked.

The shares have sold off to about $35.50 in the past 18 months amid slow business and the calling off a courtship with the retail hair-products unit of Alberto-Culver. The stock of Regis topped $40 in January on the news that it would pay out about 54 percent of its stock to Illinois-based Alberto as part of a $2.6 billion merger that would leave Finkelstein in charge and give Regis an important growth business.

But the deal fell apart in April because of waning results at Regis, which hurt the stock price. That had Alberto-Culver demanding more shares of Regis to get the Sally Beauty Supply deal done.

“We were going to have to reprice and give away 65 percent of our company, probably, ” Finkelstein told investors at a Chicago analyst conference on June 30. “And we didn’t want to do that. Not in a down cycle. We took their 50 million bucks.”

That will give second-quarter earnings, to be reported this month, a nice one-time pop.

But it doesn’t help Regis with its stalled-growth issues.

Meanwhile, Alberto-Culver, the maker of Nexxus and Alberto V05, is having a better hair year. It decided to sell a minority stake in its Sally Beauty distributor for $575 million and spin off the company on a one-for-one-share basis to shareholders, on top of a special $25 special dividend. And Alberto-Culver’s stock has trended upward since the Regis deal dissolved.

Alberto-Culver cited the pricing issue and “corporate governance” as the reason for pulling out of the deal at the time but declined to specify.

Jack Nielsen, director of finance at Regis, said the issue was more one of culture: Alberto-Culver has a hands-on board while the board of Regis is content to give veteran Finkelstein and his executives a lot of rope and autonomy.

Finkelstein, 63, a workaholic millionaire who happily plans to work another decade or so, told analysts at the Chicago conference that he and the company are up for the challenge.

For one-thing, Regis believes the long-hair trend is dying out after several years. “Thank God,” he told analysts.

Regis has put through some price increases that should result “over time” in sales at stores open at least a year returning to increases in the 2 to 4 percent range, Finkelstein said. “Over time, we feel we can generate high-single digit revenue growth and [double-digit] profits.”

Regis, with 11,000 company-owned and franchised stores nationally and an expected $2.4 billion in revenue this fiscal year, also will continue to open several hundred shops annually.

Bottom line, Finkelstein told the analysts that the market is coming to Regis in two ways: Regis is the largest chain operator, albeit with only about 5 percent of the market, and offers the best deal for solo operators when it comes time to sell their shop or small chain. Moreover, older heads get cut more often.

Sharon Zackfia, an analyst at William Blair & Co. in Chicago was persuaded that the general hair trends are starting to favor Regis again. She also cited an aggressive stock-repurchase plan as a positive factor. Zackfia believes that Regis can get up to 9 percent earnings growth over the next several years from a modest revenue increase at older stores, which will be supplemented with Finkelstein’s proven success at acquisitions.

Similarly, Harrison Grodnick, a principal in the Minneapolis Portfolio Management Group — a Regis shareholder — said investors are still disappointed the Alberto-Culver deal fell through. Regis has become a “show-me” stock, he said.

However, with the stock trading at under 15 times estimated 2007 per-share earnings, Regis is cheap, Grodnick added. “The problems they have right now will make for great opportunity if you have patience.”

Neal St. Anthony • 612-673-7144 • nstanthony@startribune.com

Add comment July 27th, 2006

EU bans 22 hair dye substances on consumer safety fears

The European Commission has banned 22 hair dye substances following research by its Scientific Committee that links certain product to an increased risk of bladder cancer.


The ban, which comes into effect on 1 December, is part of the Commission’s strategy to establish a list of hair dye substances that are considered safe for human health.

As part of this effort the Scientific Committee has submitted 115 files from manufacturers on hair dye substances that will be evaluated by the EU’s Scientific Committee on Consumer Products (SCCP).

The European Cosmetic, Toiletry and Perfumery Association, Colipa, said that it fully endorsed the Commission’s move but hinted that more work is still to be done in order to fully establish which hair dye substances are safe.

”The Commission strategy foresees a ban of the remaining hair colouring ingredients,” Colips said in a statement. ”Although this does not necessarily mean that theses substances are unsafe, the cosmetics industry fully supports this regulatory measure.”

Colipa added that the hard work of the European Commission and international scientific bodies had made hair dyes one of the most thoroughly tested, and consequently, one of the safest consumer products on the market.

European Commission vice-president for industry policy, Günter Verheugen, said of the decision, ”Substances for which there is no proof that they are safe will disappear from the market. Our safety standards do not only protect EU consumers, they also give legal certainty to the European cosmetics industry.”

The ban will come into effect for any permanent and non-permanent hair dyes for which either no safety files have been submitted or else the SCCP has an unfavourable opinion of.

The study included a public consultation demanding manufacturers to product safety files for their hair dyes proving they did not pose a health risk. The SCCP is now considering the 115 files, which should lead to a response by October.

The Commission added that since banning the 22 substances it has had no reaction from the cosmetic industry, leading it to believe that ‘the ban will not significantly impact the competitiveness of the hair dye manufacturers’.

The 22 substances that have been banned are listed on this pdf document, published by the Commission.

According to the Commission the EU market for hair dyes was valued at €2.6bn in 2004, of which 70 – 80 per cent account for permanent dyes. In the general population 60 per cent of women use hair dye, whereas 5 – 10 per cent of males use it with a frequency of 6 – 8 times a year.

Add comment July 27th, 2006

Automation helps herbal cosmetics player boost production twenty-fold

By Simon Pitman
Herbal Works, a producer of all-natural bath and body aromatherapy products, says it has installed a newly


automated processing system that has helped to boost its production nearly twenty-fold.

The company has experienced huge growth since its inception in 2001 - growth that has come off the back of significant consumer interest in natural-based products.

But off the back of this growth came a significant problem for the company – how to keep up with the demand. Basically the company was struggling to keep up with production demands, which led it to seek out a solution.

A visit to last year’s Pack Expo show in Las Vegas gave the company a number of ideas concerning automated solutions, which eventually led to the purchase of a Vol-A volumetric filler from New York-based Kaps-All Packaging Systems.

“All of our packaging operations at the time were manual, which impeded our ability to increase production. I knew that we needed new automated equipment to help grow our business,” explained Nadia Gross, president of Herbal Works.

The company produces herbal body lotions, massage oils and body scrubs with ingredients such as ginger, lemongrass, rosemary, grapefruit oil, chamomile and bergamot, which are carried by major stores throughout the United States and distributed in international markets including Europe, Canada and the Caribbean.

But recognizing the limitations of the company’s manual packaging operations, Gross realized that it was time to upgrade the production facilities.

The Vol-A is said to have a company design that saves floor space and is capable of handling a wide variety of bottle sizes containing both liquids and semi-liquid forms. On top of this flexibility is a key design feature, with a microprocessor allowing the machinery to be programmed according to fill volume and fill rate, thus limiting changeover times.

The company also purchased a 48” unscrambling turntable and a 48″ accumulation turntable from Accutek Packaging Company, based in California. The equipment is designed to load containers onto a filling line and to collect filled bottles respectively.

According to Nature Works, the combination of the these two pieces of equipment has helped the company to increase production 1,900 per cent, in turn unlocking a production bottle neck and giving the company room for further expansion in the future.

“Before we attended the Pack Expo show, we were only able to produce 5,000 bottles of product in one month. With the Kaps-All and Accutek machinery, we now produce over 100,000 bottles per month,” said Gross.

“Thanks to this new equipment, our business more than doubled in 2005, and it doesn’t show any signs of slowing down in the near future. We’ve already increased business by 78 per cent within the past few months.”

And further expansion is certainly on the cards. The company says it will be attending this year’s Pack Expo event, to be held in Chicago in October, to conduct further research into machinery that has the potential to further increase production efficiencies and continue to meet the still increasing consumer demands.

Add comment July 27th, 2006

Hair Extension Tips: What I Have Learned

Alice Ridley has been a tremendous help to HairBoutique.com since I first met her in early 2000. 


Alice emailed me that she had decided to fly from her home to Dallas, Texas in order to have a set of hair extensions applied to her hair by a HairBoutique.com hair extension expert.

Alice made her decision to have the hair extension expert add her weaves as a direct result of hair extension information that she gathered from articles and message board comments located at the HairBoutique.com website.  

I was very impressed when Alice offered to share her entire hair extension experience with us so that HairBoutique.com could help more consumers make informed hair extension decisions.   Alice emailed me that she “admires The HairBoutique.com’s willingness to share hair care information and hair extension information with our visitors”. 

Follow-up With Alice 

Alice had her extensions successfully applied in May of 2000.  She sent me some follow-up emails reported that she very happy with the work that was done.  She also really liked her new hair extensions.

In September of 2000 Alice and I corresponded again about the status of her hair extensions.  They had been removed, as planned.  Everything had gone well with the extensions.  However, extensions have a limited life cycle and once the extensions had met their life span, Alice had them successfully removed.

I asked Alice is she would be willing to answer some common hair extension questions that I receive on a regular basis.  Alice agreed to include a summary of the things she had learned as a direct result of her experiences.  Listed below are the questions that I asked Alice about her hair extension experience with her complete answers. 

Add comment July 26th, 2006

The Return Of Short Healthy Strands

I caught up this morning by phone with Celebrity Hairdresser Robert Hallowell who is holding court with the hair and beauty


media in New York before heading off to Europe for an extended trip.

Now that his favorite long term hair client - Geena Davis - is on what may be a permanent hiatus from Commander In Chief, Robert is playing catch up with meetings that have been put off until the end of Commander’s filming season.

I asked Robert what new hair trends he was seeing at the present time.   He reported “short hair is definitely on the way back in fashion”.  Robert remarked that “bobs, pixies or anything that falls into the gamine category” is becoming extremely popular in the current hair fashion landscape.

This craze for short styles has been building since Sienna Miller, Natalie Portman and Keira Knightley appeared for various film roles with super short locks.  Lauren Holly went very short - for her role as the NCIS Chief in early 2006.

Robert reported that during his current weeklong stay in New York he “cut long time client Lucy Liu’s hair above her shoulders into a classic bob that is very short at the nape of the neck with longer strands extending from there in a traditional Bob”. Robert noted “Lucy’s new bob has lots of texture and is worn around her face - which is how Lucy prefers to wear her hair”.

Lucy uses Robert’s fabulous hair care line - Prawduct - which was recently enhanced with lots of new goodies to make the already great hair care line even more spectacular.

Although long hair is still very much in fashion, with no signs of it losing popularity anytime soon, Robert noted that long hair fashions are more and more “tied to embracing natural textures”. 

Robert pointed out that “hair consumers are no longer willing to risk damaged strands due to chemical treatments just to create bigger curls or waves”.  Instead, as Robert noted, “the trend is to take natural hair textures - both with long and short styles and crank them up with hair friendly styling techniques such as finger scrunching, wet roller sets and other healthy texture creating techniques”.

Add comment July 26th, 2006

Hair & Hairstyling Tips: Sandra Bullock’s Bob Hairstyle

Sandra “Sandy” Annette Bullock was born on July 26, 1964 in a Virginia suburb of Washington D.C. to a German opera singer. 


Although she has been acting since 1987 (Hangman) she didn’t break out as an actress until her role driving the out-of-control bus in Speed with co-star Keanu Reeves in 1994.

Over the past two years Sandy has made a lot of changes in her life.  Her most recent is the adoption of a spectacular new top-of-the-shoulders bob hairstyle.  A former member of People’s 50 Most Beautiful People (1996 & 1999), the naturalized Texan unveiled her super-seductive classic bob with a peek-a-boo side-swept “Veronica Lake” fringe.

Flaunting a sleek shimmering shorter style, Sandra captured the spotlight at the Premiere of The Lake House.  Besides a major hairstyle change, Sandra married for the first time one year ago to Monster Garage man Jesse James.  She also literally took a turn back into time in order to co-star with Keanu Reeves. 

According to media reports Sandra and Keanu have remained good friends since they worked together 12 years ago and wanted to re-create the chemistry of their first role together in Speed once the movie’s producer suggested the idea to them. 

The magic must have been completely preserved because The Lake House has garnered great reviews and is doing well at the box office.  A love story, it showcases Sandra’s excellent acting talents.

Add comment July 26th, 2006

Schoolboy in isolation for haircut

A teenage schoolboy is in trouble for a second time after breaking school rules with a short haircut.

Micheal Marsden’s mum is so furious at plans to ‘isolate’ her son as punishment, she has kept himoff school.

When Michael, known as Mickey, came home with a new short haircut his mum thought he looked smart but his teachers didn’t agree.

Uniform rules at Our Lady’s Catholic High School in Fulwood, Preston, stipulate that “extreme hairstyles” are not allowed and anyone breaking the rule is subjected to a day working away from the rest of the class as punishment.

Micky, who lives with his mum Debbie Foye and his three brothers and sisters, in Threefields, Ingol, was subjected to isolation for an identical haircut a few months ago.

But on Tuesday his mum refused to allow him to be kept from his peers and kept him at home, insisting he looks “smart”.

She said: “He has a number two on top and a number one at the bottom, with a bit of a fringe at the front. I think he looks smart but the school said it was not a sensible haircut.

“I had an argument with them last time, so my partner took him into school this time and they said it wasn’t a sensible haircut. “They said he would have to go into isolation.

“It is not fair to put him in isolation so he came home and they said he could go back (the next day).

“His hair had grown quite long and it starts to go to a peak and people take the Mickey and it looks scruffy.

“I don’t understand why it should affect his education.”
Debbie, who also has an 11 year daughter at Our Lady’s, said she thought the school was being “ridiculous” and acting unreasonably.

Mike Fitzpatrick, deputy headteacher at the St Anthony’s Drive school, said Our Lady’s was proud of its uniform.

Although he said he couldn’t comment on individual pupils, Mr Fitzpatrick added: “We have very high standards of uniform and appearance, which are well supported by parents.

“As far as hair styles are concerned we ask for no extremes and that is explained to the children and parents. We have to draw the line somewhere.

Normal punishment is a day’s isolation as we ask parents to work with us on these matters.”

Mr Fitzpatrick said short hair was not banned but added the general rule was that if more hair than scalp was visible then that was acceptable.

The same rule is enforced at all schools in the area and also requires girls to tie long hair up.

What do you think:
Are schools right to punish pupils over “extreme haircuts”?

Add comment July 26th, 2006

Convertible hair tips

Anyone familiar with AutoWeek’s But Wait There’s More knows about “Press Releases We Didn’t Finish.” Here’s one we wish we never even started.


Chrysler and celebrity hairstylist Ken Pavés (guess it’s a good thing we have no idea who he is) listed some tips to “help you look fabulous when you arrive after driving with the convertible top down.” (He must be a famous hairstylist because he forced us to find the “e” with an acute (thanks Alex for the correction) on it for his name.) Of course he also uses the opportunity to plug his own line of “convertible proof” hairspray. You can click to read his tips, or just chalk this up as an Autoblog post you didn’t finish. Men need not apply, unless you’re looking for a good chuckle.

 Create an instant day-to-night celebrity look with a sassy, loose chignon. Create this great style by working with your natural texture. Pull your strands into a smooth, low ponytail. Wrap the ends loosely around the base of the ponytail, securing firmly with bobby pins, letting a few random pieces cascade from the bun.

 Be Natural Rejoice if you are blessed with natural curls or waves, since natural textures are what hair is all about for 2005, and this look needs no defense against the wind! Go with your natural flow and let those ringlets rule.

 Just Add Wind - Add a definite rock-glam edge to your strands by creating the definitive wind-in-your-hair style. Start by shaking out your current do.  Flip your head over and spray hairspray liberally through your roots. Flip your head back over and style with your fingers. Go wild since this sizzling style is even better after a ride with the top down!

 Let The Good Times Roll - Big, sexy hair rules in 2005. The bigger and wilder, the better! Drop the top and dont look back - but only after you lock in your gorgeous new style with Pav?Professional Flawless Convertible-Proof Hairspray.

 Crank Up The Volume This applies to more than just the radio in your convertible. Blow dry your tresses, and while theyre slightly warm, pop in some Velcro rollers. Take a few minutes to apply your make-up and get dressed. Remove your rollers and shake out your strands for a lightly tousled look.

Add comment July 26th, 2006

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