
MDC: Can you tell us a bit about how you got started doing hair?
D: I got started doing hair very young, actually. I was about thirteen years of age, sitting around the breakfast table with my mum, dad and my brothers and it was as simple as my big brother saying that I ought to become a hair dresser since I was always messing around with my hair. I got a job in a local barbershop and I was quite happy sweeping up and making eight pound a day. Then my mum made me write a letter to Vidal Sassoon in London. At the time I had no idea what they were, but they offered me a job while I was still at school, so I left school early and went and did a 3 year apprenticeship with them. During those years I realized that there was possibly more to doing hair than what I’d seen.
MDC: That is a really great way to look at it though. If it were just hair then it might get dull after a while.
D: I think so, hair is a huge part of what I do and a lot of my friends, through the nature of what I do, are hair dressers, make up artists or stylists. I think it is the creative thread that runs through everything that we do that brings like-minded people together. That is why the art world and our world cross over so well, it’s so compatible.
He is one of the worlds best hairstylist. I love his work and of course the way he looks, here is the rest of models.com`s interview.
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