AHP Indie Stylist

Volume 5 Issue 1

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Explore your benefits at associatedhairprofessionals.com 89 advertisement Above: Ulta Beauty Design Team Training in New York City this spring. Right: Learning to cut the butterfly means learning to customize it too. MEET THE ARTISTS On these pages, go behind the scenes of a recent training session and photo shoot in New York City, where 20 Design Team members collaborated and learned how to create and share butterfly trendspiration classes and content across their communities. Led by three Design Team Specialists, the session offered tips and must-use tools for: • Cutting—Gilad Goldstein (@myguiltycrown) • Color—Beto Sanchez (@betoloveshair) • Style—Justin Toves-Vincilione (@ahappyjustin) Give your butterfly skills a lift! Learn more in the Beauty Services section at careers.ulta.com. THE CUT: CREATING RESULTS The butterfly look has been around for decades (think Farrah Fawcett) and is still evolving, driven by social media and new generations of interest, says Design Team specialist Gilad Goldstein. Like other hair fashion trends, it all starts with the cut. The butterfly is characterized by feathered, face-framing layers that transition into the length, Goldstein explains. It is achieved through mastering, then customizing, the fundamentals: • Over-Direction—Creating weight and length in the opposite direction of the natural fall of the hair. • Elevation—Redistributing weight within a section to create layers. • The Cutting Line—The artistic signature that can completely change the look. "You can maintain even more length while layering by exaggerating the diagonal cutting line," Goldstein says. Pro Tip: Take it easy on the tension. When cutting the initial guide to begin butterfly layering, cut no shorter than the chin. "If the guide becomes shorter, we create bangs that change the look into more of a wolf cut or shag shape," Goldstein says. "To prevent [this], cut the guide with little-to- no tension so it doesn't pop up shorter when the hair dries."

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