- Make sure that you are positioned at eye level with the area of hair that you are cutting. An good example is when you are standing and trying to trim the ends on a girl with long hair. Either adjust your height by bending your knees, sitting in a chair while you cut or putting the child in a taller chair. It's way easier to cut a straight line when you can see it.
- Keep your elbows up as you cut. There are some areas of the head where it's more accurate to drop your elbows, but in general keeping your elbows up makes it easier to cut a straight line.
- Only cut the hair that is held between the tip of your fingers and the knuckle. The hair that is held between your knuckle and your hand is not held with the same tension as the rest of the hair due to the larger gap between your fingers in that area. Sticking to the area between the fingertips and the knuckle will make your cutting more precise.
- Don't overstretch the hair as you hold it during the cut. Damp hair can stretch by as much as 60% of it's usual length. Using too much tension will result in hair that is shorter than you expected and it will not appear evenly cut as the hair dries and snaps back to it's original length.
- Make sure that the hair is evenly damp throughout the hair cutting process. This makes it easier to determine the accuracy of your hair cut since damp hair will hang to a longer point than dry hair.
Thanks for reading, peace and hairpiness to all,
Larry