Saturday, February 11, 2012
11:18 AM
By Maysa Rawi
Going bald upsets men more than bankruptcy or bachelorhood.
But now there’s a cure set to save them money and heartache - by tattooing ‘hair’ on.
HIS (Hair-Ink-Skin) Hair has launched an innovative new technique to disguise baldness - using a unique form of tattoos.
And it has become so popular that bookings have soared by 20 per cent in the past 12 months.
Celebrity hairdresser Adee Phelan, left, has launched 'HIS Hair' in Manchester, which provides a non-surgical solution to hair loss for men
Celebrity Hairdresser, Adee Phelan, who officially opened the company’s newest clinic in Manchester, is one of dozens of customers to have had the new procedure, known as MHT (micro hair technique) scalp pigmentation.
It gives the appearance of a short, cropped ‘buzz’ hair - cut by applying different shades of specifically blended pigments to the scalp to replicate the size, shape and density of micro hairs.
TV stylist Adee, whose clients have included David Beckham, Kerry Katona, Elizabeth Jagger, Sarah Harding and the England Football team, said: 'I was 24 when I started losing my hair. I got behind the product because I know it looks good.
Andrew Staniland, left, Geoff Thomas and Daz Day, right, have all had the £2,000 treatment done
'Going bald didn’t particularly bother me but there are guys out there who are literally suicidal about it'
'Stars like Wayne Rooney, tweeting about having a hair transplant, have really helped the cause and encouraged people to face it head-on.
'But not everybody has £25,000 to spend and this is a great affordable alternative.'
The technique, which costs an average of £2,000, was developed by Ian Watson, who founded HIS Hair after he developed alopecia in his mid-twenties, following the tragic death of his 32 year-old brother Paul, from cancer.
In desperation, he asked Paul’s widow, Ranbir Rai-Watson to find the finest pen she could get to draw dots onto his scalp, hoping to emulate the look of a ‘cropped’ haircut.
The process is a scalp pigmentation technique in the form of tattooing a cropped 'buzz' hair style onto the head
The ink came off in the shower but Ian, now 42, and mother of one Ranbir, 41, knew their ‘crazy idea’ could become a successful business concept.
After years of intensive research, they began honing the MHT technique alongside some of the world’s best hair loss experts, as well as semi-permanent make-up artists in Harley Street, London and Melbourne, Australia.
And a decade later the Birmingham-based company is opening clinics across Europe and the US.
The technique works by applying different shades of specifically blended pigments to the scalp to replicate the size, shape and density of micro hairs
Said Adee: “The crop will always be fashionable.
'This is a great permanent, non-surgical option that can disguise everything from male- pattern
baldness to receding hair lines and scars on your head.
'I thought losing my hair didn’t bother me but even I felt younger and more confident afterwards.
'And it looks so natural, most people don’t even know I’ve had it done.'
According to statistics 10 million men in the UK currently suffer from hair loss -with 50 per cent affected by male patterned baldness by the age of 50.
A quarter go bald as young as 30 and by 60 as many as two-thirds are showing signs of it.
For many its more traumatic than going bust - or never finding the love of their life.
And British men will worry about its onset more than anyone else in Europe, even though 75 per cent believe there’s nothing they can do about it.
source:dailymail
Going bald upsets men more than bankruptcy or bachelorhood.
But now there’s a cure set to save them money and heartache - by tattooing ‘hair’ on.
HIS (Hair-Ink-Skin) Hair has launched an innovative new technique to disguise baldness - using a unique form of tattoos.
And it has become so popular that bookings have soared by 20 per cent in the past 12 months.
Celebrity hairdresser Adee Phelan, left, has launched 'HIS Hair' in Manchester, which provides a non-surgical solution to hair loss for men
Celebrity Hairdresser, Adee Phelan, who officially opened the company’s newest clinic in Manchester, is one of dozens of customers to have had the new procedure, known as MHT (micro hair technique) scalp pigmentation.
It gives the appearance of a short, cropped ‘buzz’ hair - cut by applying different shades of specifically blended pigments to the scalp to replicate the size, shape and density of micro hairs.
TV stylist Adee, whose clients have included David Beckham, Kerry Katona, Elizabeth Jagger, Sarah Harding and the England Football team, said: 'I was 24 when I started losing my hair. I got behind the product because I know it looks good.
Andrew Staniland, left, Geoff Thomas and Daz Day, right, have all had the £2,000 treatment done
'Going bald didn’t particularly bother me but there are guys out there who are literally suicidal about it'
'Stars like Wayne Rooney, tweeting about having a hair transplant, have really helped the cause and encouraged people to face it head-on.
'But not everybody has £25,000 to spend and this is a great affordable alternative.'
The technique, which costs an average of £2,000, was developed by Ian Watson, who founded HIS Hair after he developed alopecia in his mid-twenties, following the tragic death of his 32 year-old brother Paul, from cancer.
In desperation, he asked Paul’s widow, Ranbir Rai-Watson to find the finest pen she could get to draw dots onto his scalp, hoping to emulate the look of a ‘cropped’ haircut.
The process is a scalp pigmentation technique in the form of tattooing a cropped 'buzz' hair style onto the head
The ink came off in the shower but Ian, now 42, and mother of one Ranbir, 41, knew their ‘crazy idea’ could become a successful business concept.
After years of intensive research, they began honing the MHT technique alongside some of the world’s best hair loss experts, as well as semi-permanent make-up artists in Harley Street, London and Melbourne, Australia.
And a decade later the Birmingham-based company is opening clinics across Europe and the US.
The technique works by applying different shades of specifically blended pigments to the scalp to replicate the size, shape and density of micro hairs
Said Adee: “The crop will always be fashionable.
'This is a great permanent, non-surgical option that can disguise everything from male- pattern
baldness to receding hair lines and scars on your head.
'I thought losing my hair didn’t bother me but even I felt younger and more confident afterwards.
'And it looks so natural, most people don’t even know I’ve had it done.'
According to statistics 10 million men in the UK currently suffer from hair loss -with 50 per cent affected by male patterned baldness by the age of 50.
A quarter go bald as young as 30 and by 60 as many as two-thirds are showing signs of it.
For many its more traumatic than going bust - or never finding the love of their life.
And British men will worry about its onset more than anyone else in Europe, even though 75 per cent believe there’s nothing they can do about it.
source:dailymail