Cutting Hand
Posted in art supplies on 02/24/2010 02:30 am by admin
Cutting Hand

How to Coordinate your Hands When Giving a Haircut
If you are totally new to cutting hair, it can be difficult to get your hands in synch with what you want them to do. When giving a haircut, you need to use both hands. They both have different but important jobs to do. Since only 15% of people are left-handed, we will look at the jobs your hands do assuming you are right-handed (for sake of illustration). Your right hand is your cutting hand and your left hand is your holding hand. Your left hand is very important with your pinkie and ring fingers being your spacer fingers with your middle and pointer fingers being your holding fingers.
Jobs of Your Holding Hand
Your holding hand (for illustration, it's your left or less dominant hand) has 3 important jobs to do:
* Holds the hair - Once your right hand combs the hair up away from the head, your left hand takes hold of that hair between your middle and pointer fingers.
* Decides how much to cut - Your pinkie and ring fingers determine the spacing between the scalp and the cutting point. They decide how much hair needs to be cut off and act as a guide.
* Holds your comb - Once your spacer fingers help you decide where to cut, you need to transfer your comb from your cutting hand to your holding hand. Without letting go of the hair in your holding/left hand, slide your scissors between your thumb and your pointer. Press your thumb against your hand to hold your comb steady.
Jobs of Your Cutting Hand
Your cutting hand (your right or dominant hand) has 2 jobs to do:
* Combs up hair - You start off with wet, clean hair lying on the scalp. You need to comb up a section of hair so your holding hand can slip it between your 2 holding fingers.
* Works the scissor - When the hair is held between your holding fingers and is measured using your spacing fingers, you are ready to transfer your comb to your holding hand and make the cut.
Even though your cutting hand makes the most difference visually, it is the work of the holding hand that makes all the difference. If you do not have your hair neatly lifted and spaced, you will end up with a messy and uneven haircut.
For directions for how to manipulate scissors correctly, see The Beginner's Guide to Cutting Hair chapter 5.
About the Author
Nadine Visscher is the author of The Beginner's Guide to Cutting Hair (http://www.youcuttinghair.com) and Cutting Your Own Hair. She has been cutting hair for 20 years and has helped many people save a lot of money by teaching them the necessary basic techniques to give a great haircut.
What exactly does Zabiha mean, and does it have to be hand-cut to be Halal?
I've come to know of some people in my community who've stopped eating chicken (certified Halal) because it's not hand-cut, but rather machine cut. Does the meat become Haram if it's machine-cut, and from where does the hand-cut criteria come from?
Assalamu alaykum
http://islam-qa.com/en/ref/75891/halal%20cut
Brother, The Meat which is slaughtered Today by the means of Modern Machines is Halal, only if the blades are sharp and they cut the throat and the oesophagus. If the blades are not sharp, then the meat becomes Makrooh. As long as they say "Bismillah" while operating. The Person who operates the Machines and says "bismillah" should be a Muslim or a kitaabi (one of the people of the Book, i.e., a Jew or a Christian).
Wassalamu Alaykum
Criss Angel cutting the hand of a man.avi
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