A blown kiss often gets misdirected in the wind, inadvertently creating lovelorn alley cats and hopelessly romantic mailboxes. Take control of the signals you send with today's Groupon: for $50, you get $100 worth of hair services at LaMode Salon on Lyndale Avenue. This Groupon expires three months from today's date, and it may not be used for products.
LaMode Salon’s skilled staff of stylists helps transform tussled hairdos into prim and proper coiffures with a wide range of beautifying services. During each treatment, these skilled strand sages spruce up drooping noodle nests with quality Bumble and bumble products, which buttress each women’s ($35+) and men’s ($30+) haircut with lustrous sheen. Highlight an entire mane with a full-foil treatment ($75+), or only mark the relevant passages with a partial foil ($60+). Special occasions can be classily upgraded with an updo ($45+), while simultaneously avoiding the need to wear an allergy-inducing centuries-old powdered wig. Or smooth out frizzies with a Brazilian Blowout (call for pricing). Soak in the sleek décor that features comfy furnishings, burnished wood floors, and tall, striking mirrors before brushing off follicular wreckage from shoulders and twirling down the street, framed by a halo of stylish head threads and enthusiastic glee.
This Groupon is valid for new clients only.
Reviews
LaMode Salon gets a perfect five-star average rating from Citysearchers.
- I love getting my hair cut because it always feels so good to be pampered with a soothing wash and head and neck massage and leave EVERY TIME looking fabulous. – Cindle
- The salon is very comfortable too. Great modern decor and friendly greeters. – bgccscjjc
- Everything about my visit was wonderful. – reviewernumber9
Groupon Says
Notable People Get Notable Haircuts in American History
Jonas Salk on June 5, 1963: In the years after discovering the first effective polio vaccine, Jonas Salk spent most of his time cooking gourmet meals for his cat, inventing the first MP3 player, and growing his hair out in an attempt to become more popular with women 35 and under. After a string of two unfortunate personal setbacks—his cat dying from being loved too hard and a couple awkward dates with younger women—Salk decided it was time for a drastic change. On the morning of June 5, 1963, Salk sheared off the majority of his locks with a number-two attachment. Later, he went on to become the first non-Russian to fly a car and was the basis for the NBA logo.
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