En konstnärlig tolkning av av ordet katastrof. Om du letar efter en frisör som anammar principen "mindre är mer" (i betydelsen att han missade mer än han klippte), då har du hittat rätt. Vi gick in med hopp …
An artistic interpretation of the word disaster. If you're looking for a barber who embraces the principle of "less is more" (in the sense that he missed more than he cut), then you've come to the right place. We went in hoping for a nice fade, but came out as a warning sign of what happens when you let someone who's clearly never held a pair of scissors go wild on a head. Let's start with the "fade." It wasn't so much a fade as a series of random islands of hair left here and there. In places where there should actually be some length left, he managed to chop so hard it looks like a rodent has built a nest in a hole in the scalp. Then there's the beard trim. The barber professionally assured us that the beard looked "shitty." The only problem? He never touched the beard. Not once. It was an impressive display of gaslighting – standing there praising one's own non-work. The tip of the iceberg was the customer in the waiting room who, with a look that suggested he was either blind or working really hard to be Sweden's most polite person, said that "it looked good". No, it didn't. It was the worst haircut I've ever seen in my life. When I pointed out that maybe you shouldn't charge full price for such a total mess, the answer was a categorical no. The hairdresser insisted that it was "nicely cut". Paying full price for this was pure charity on our part. In short: If you have a hate list of people you want to give a bad day to, I highly recommend sending them here. If, on the other hand, you want to have hair left on your head in a reasonably even haircut – run the other way.