Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Spoken like a 19 year old cosmetology student in the Midwest. My $400 hair place in the DMV is nothing special at all. I know they won’t trash my hair and the stylist is nice; I like her. But no, honey, there is nothing you could take away except for my tea- everything else is the the bare minimum you expect for color and cut, so that $400 is absolutely for her time, talent, and expenses.
If you’re paying $400 for “nothing special at all”, then you’re a fool not to go someplace cheaper. I pay half that and my salon is great.
Do you live in DC? What services do you get? What’s “special” about your great place? Because I’ve been to the salons named in magazines and tagged by socialites and DC political women and they’re good. Talented and nice people. But there is nothing special about the ambiance or services outside of a well trained stylist. Nothing. Ambiance and whatever imaginary extras some people keep referring is nothing.
I went to Luigi salon in Georgetown and the stylist could get the basics layer done right, I came home with uneven hair and -$120.
I see a new stylist near my home now, he is freelancing and talented, with 20 percent tip a haircut is less than 100.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Spoken like a 19 year old cosmetology student in the Midwest. My $400 hair place in the DMV is nothing special at all. I know they won’t trash my hair and the stylist is nice; I like her. But no, honey, there is nothing you could take away except for my tea- everything else is the the bare minimum you expect for color and cut, so that $400 is absolutely for her time, talent, and expenses.
If you’re paying $400 for “nothing special at all”, then you’re a fool not to go someplace cheaper. I pay half that and my salon is great.
Do you live in DC? What services do you get? What’s “special” about your great place? Because I’ve been to the salons named in magazines and tagged by socialites and DC political women and they’re good. Talented and nice people. But there is nothing special about the ambiance or services outside of a well trained stylist. Nothing. Ambiance and whatever imaginary extras some people keep referring is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Spoken like a 19 year old cosmetology student in the Midwest. My $400 hair place in the DMV is nothing special at all. I know they won’t trash my hair and the stylist is nice; I like her. But no, honey, there is nothing you could take away except for my tea- everything else is the the bare minimum you expect for color and cut, so that $400 is absolutely for her time, talent, and expenses.
If you’re paying $400 for “nothing special at all”, then you’re a fool not to go someplace cheaper. I pay half that and my salon is great.
Anonymous wrote:So what do the non tippers do for a spa service and 20% gratuity is automatically added? Do you refuse to pay it or do you refuse to go to places that include tip?
I tip my hair stylist 20% every time and tip the shampoo person. She does an amazing job and I appreciate her, therefore the tip. I’m also not an jerk in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Spoken like a 19 year old cosmetology student in the Midwest. My $400 hair place in the DMV is nothing special at all. I know they won’t trash my hair and the stylist is nice; I like her. But no, honey, there is nothing you could take away except for my tea- everything else is the the bare minimum you expect for color and cut, so that $400 is absolutely for her time, talent, and expenses.
Anonymous wrote:So what do the non tippers do for a spa service and 20% gratuity is automatically added? Do you refuse to pay it or do you refuse to go to places that include tip?
I tip my hair stylist 20% every time and tip the shampoo person. She does an amazing job and I appreciate her, therefore the tip. I’m also not an jerk in general.
Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Anonymous wrote:So what do the non tippers do for a spa service and 20% gratuity is automatically added? Do you refuse to pay it or do you refuse to go to places that include tip?
I tip my hair stylist 20% every time and tip the shampoo person. She does an amazing job and I appreciate her, therefore the tip. I’m also not an jerk in general.
Anonymous wrote:If you're spending $400 on your hair and won't shell out an additional $100 in tips ($80 to stylist, who usually shares with the assistants who get you a beverage and get you ready for color application, plus $20 for shampoo person), you're cheap. The $100 spread among those people makes a big difference to them and not as much to you. Plus, honestly, it affects the quality of service you get. If you can't afford that, go to a less expensive salon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even if spending money is an afterthought for the wealthy lawyer lady PP, she should still be able to comprehend that a $425 service might be expensive-but-acceptable and a $510 (425+85 tip) service too-much for many people? Or is anybody who looks at a price tag of anything automatically a cheap loser in PP's books?
The price tag includes an implicit tipping expectation. If you're telling yourself it doesn't, you're cheap and you're rationalizing it. I don't like to use the term "loser" -- it's Trumpy.
Anonymous wrote:Even if spending money is an afterthought for the wealthy lawyer lady PP, she should still be able to comprehend that a $425 service might be expensive-but-acceptable and a $510 (425+85 tip) service too-much for many people? Or is anybody who looks at a price tag of anything automatically a cheap loser in PP's books?