Posted on 12/14/2005 2:35:03 PM PST by nickcarraway
PHILADELPHIA -- Steven Wooke takes a swig from a bottle of Heineken as his left hand rests on a small table, his fingers spread out like a fan of playing cards.
He's getting a manicure -- or hand detailing, as the salon calls it -- and it's a pampering the 24-year-old information technology manager has learned to enjoy.
``My girlfriend notices it,'' said Wooke during a recent visit to an American Male salon for nail grooming sans polish. ``I try to come in every two weeks.''
American Male -- which is opening its 15th salon, in Las Vegas, in February -- is one of a growing number of salons devoted to men who want more than just a barbershop haircut but don't feel comfortable sitting in women's beauty salons and wouldn't be caught dead entering a froufrou day spa.
The salons are catering to an apparently growing interest by men in grooming. Sales of men's skin care products sold through department stores rose 13 percent last year, more than double the growth for the women's market, according to NPD Group, a marketing research firm in Port Washington, N.Y.
Retail sales in the U.S. men's grooming market are expected to reach $10 billion by 2008, up 25 percent from last year, according to Packaged Facts, a unit of MarketResearch.com in New York.
From the decor to the terminology they use, men's salons are seeking to put some distance between themselves and beauty salons.
Some have strong sports themes, including TVs tuned to sports channels. Some offer free beer. And at least one lets clients light up cigars. Prices for haircuts, waxing, manicures, pedicures, facials, shaving and massages start at about $20 and go up from there.
``Men don't really like going to salons. They don't like being with women in there and they don't like the smell of the salons,'' said Howard Hafetz, chief executive of Raylon Corp., American Male Salons' parent company. ``They don't want to look across the aisle and see their buddy's wife over there.''
Raylon, based in Reading, 50 miles northwest of Philadelphia, now operates or licenses salons in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, North Carolina, California, Illinois, Oklahoma and Colorado.
Other chains catering to men's grooming include Miami-based The Art of Shaving, which has eight locations in four states and is opening 10 more by the end of 2006; Sport Clips of Georgetown, Texas, with 300 franchised locations; and Roosters Men's Grooming Centers of Round Rock, Texas, with 13 salons open with five more under construction.
``Men are getting more vain,'' said Marian Salzman, author of ``The Future of Men'' and director of strategic content at ad agency JWT in New York. ``There's more pressure to look young and sexy. Even young boys are waxing their bodies to be hairless.''
But is male grooming a lasting trend or will it dissipate as quickly as nail polish remover?
``I do think it's viable,'' said Michael Flocker, author of ``The Metrosexual Guide to Style: A Handbook for the Modern Man.'' ``I think the presentation of the concept is very important. If it looks at all girlie, it will be intimidating to men. If it looks sleek, men will respond to it.''
Joe Grondin, a barber and founder of Roosters, understands that many men won't go to a business that could expose them to ridicule from their poker buddies.
What Roosters does is get rid of hair that men don't want, wherever it is, Grondin said.
``We do a lot of eyebrows, you know, to get rid of the unibrow thing,'' he said.
American Male salons take care to avoid flowery accents, pink or red hues and whiffs of hairspray or nail polish. At the Philadelphia location, sports memorabilia, including black-and-white pictures of baseball greats Joe DiMaggio and Jackie Robinson, adorn one wall.
Steering clear of feminine terms, American Male has dubbed manicures and pedicures hand and foot detailing; covering one's gray is called camouflage. The salons also offer eyebrow, chest and back waxing and massages.
Hafetz said male salons are trying to fill a need traditional barbershops did not.
``The barbershop was part of the American fabric in the 40s, 50s and 60s,'' he said. ``The barbers lost touch with what their clients really wanted.''
Last month, Mac Morgan went to a male salon for the first time.
Before the stylist started his haircut, Morgan was led to a corner of the salon where a vat of orange-hued wax awaited. As part of the hand paraffin wax treatment, the stylist dipped his hand into the wax until it formed a second skin that moisturizes. Plastic gloves go on and then fluffy cotton mitts.
The 25-year-old software engineer from suburban Philadelphia then reclined by the shampooing station where his feet were propped up on a taupe leather ottoman and a warm towel spread over his face.
Morgan booked the ``Quality Grooming Experience'' package: a $38 treatment that comes with a minifacial, scalp massage, haircut, shampoo, conditioning and styling.
As the stylist alternatively washed his hair and massaged his scalp, she asked how it felt.
``It feels good,'' Morgan said. ``I've been to women's salons. But I feel comfortable here."
I walked in looking like a wookie...and walked out looking like a Mexican hairless..I had to buy an overcoat.
This is wrong on so many levels...:) Real men do not have their nails done.
Once a year, I go to a barber shop in southwest Minneapolis and have the barber give me a shave with a straight-edge razor.
The hot towels and warm shaving lotion feel pretty damned good. He also doesn't charge me an arm and a leg either.
I also use an exfoliant on my skin. Go to a Walgreens, Eckerd, etc and pick up some St Ives Invigorating Apricot Scrub. It works. And no feminine smell either.
http://www.stives.com/products/show_product.cfm?type=11
Ewwwwwwwwww! Massages, OK. Manicures? No WAY!
My uncle's barber shop/salon has a pool table, a full bar, cigars, and copies of Playboy and American Rifleman. My kind of place.
I don't care for manicures. Nevertheless, I used to go to a place in the Bronx where the gents from La Cosa Nostra would get manicures.
Yeah, sure, spend $38.00 on this stuff, and then go put a tranny in the Jeep! Thank God I'm a country boy!
Real men trim their own nails. If they insist on having them done, they stick their fingers in a pit bull cage and let the puppy chew on the nails.
I hope that "tranny" means transmission.
They should have renamed themselves La Cosa Gaystra then.
You have heard of the Gay Mafia, haven't you?
Yes, I have. But I don't admit it.
ahhh hahahaha....
At least he's talking about just sticking one in the Jeep and not telling you about the one that got blown out.
Dick Cheney never trims his own nails. He simply stares at them until the tips melt off.
Perfect example of unmitigated faggotry.
Real men do their own nails with a Dremel, or on a grinding wheel.
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