If hair could talk, it would have a mouth, transforming stylish head wraps into cruel mufflers and skinny headbands into orthodontia. Today's Groupon gives hair a voice without the expensive dental upkeep: for $25, you get $55 worth of cut, color, styling, or conditioning services at Allure Hair Designs & Mini Spa in Wexford.
With 60 years of combined styling experience, the Allure Hair Designs & Mini Spa owners, Tami McCleary and Judy Campbell, wield high-quality hair products to deliver an extensive menu of services. Experienced tress tamers crop unruly coifs with cuts for women ($36+) and men ($27+), soothe stressed strands with a relaxing shampoo and style ($25+), and coax stubborn ponytails into dignified updos ($55+) more effectively than threatening to take away their scrunchie privileges. Opt for a color retouch ($45+), or subtly or dramatically enhance hair with partial foil highlights ($55+), putting strands in the hands of staff members who strive to maintain and improve texture as they work in a new shade. Stylists keep up-to-date with mane-modifying techniques by attending local and national seminars, studying under experts such as What Not to Wear ’s Nick Arrojo and at New York’s Wella Studio, and gazing intently into crystal balls to determine clients' innermost styling desires before each appointment.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Creative Discipline Ideas
Children sleep for about 18 hours a day, but they will sometimes act out during their brief windows of lucidity. And though any parent can teach right from wrong with a timeout or by withholding attention, it takes a special parent to discipline outside the box. Here are some creative punishments for unruly children:
- The child must eat two dinners before bedtime.
- The child must read your Toy Story fan fiction in which Buzz Lightyear spends 47 pages feeling sad about his life.
- The child must watch you smoke an entire carton of cigarettes while you explain precisely why doing so hurts your body.
- The child must get a boring art degree instead of a trendy business one.
- The child must defeat a robot version of his/herself.
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