HBC08 wrote: » 22e every 2nd fri. Could go to a cheaper place could leave it every 3 or 4 weeks but I like my hair looking well. Had the hair long for a good number of years and would cut it myself so never spent anything in barbers,i guess im making up for it now!
murpho999 wrote: » 22.7% tip is ridiculous. This is not America. The barber is well paid you know.
binana wrote: » I went from shoulder length to a pixie cut earlier this year, and ladies I highly recommend cutting all your hair off. The initial cut cost €60 with consultation included, but since then it costs less than half the price for maintainence trims. The time savings in showering/styling add up too! I might try a barbers next though.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » I’m not going to insult both of us by asking for change of €3.90 from a fiver. .
Brylee Nice Pimple wrote: » No I don't tip. It's a one man owner operated concern. He has his price list and I pay accordingly. Although I don't take the €1 OAP discount.
Raul Most Sorceress wrote: » Just don't give a tip at all and stop keeping this this idiotic American practice alive. I love visiting the US but the tipping cuture drives me insane, alternatively main land europe has no tipping culture and there is no expectation of tips anywhere including restaurants which is brilliant. I really detest tipping with a passion.
dd973 wrote: » Why has Steven Gerrard's scalp not aged since he was 15?, blokes in their 40's onwards having thick mad heads of hair is more weird than male pattern baldness.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » Really? Both my father and father-in-law have pretty much all their hair still. Their hairlines have only slightly receded. One is 71, the other is 67. My father-in-law’s hair also only started to go grey in his late 50s, not even mild salt and pepper before that, according to the huz. Apparently he was always getting sly comments from people, insinuating that he must dye his hair. He was relieved when it finally stared to grey.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Listen, I like to reward good service within the service industry. The reason I go to this particular barbers is that I know they’ll do a good job. I’m not going to insult both of us by asking for change of €3.90 from a fiver. You don’t have to tip if you don’t want to. I personally find things go smoother when you grease the wheels a little.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » Unfortunately, if you don’t tip in restaurants, this means that you are already thought of as a massive stinge by some of your friends and acquaintances. I don’t know you, and I can still say that with confidence. Whether or not you think that fair, that’s the reality.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » In the US, the tipping culture is screwed up and employers don’t pay their workers a living wage because of it. But I’d never not tip because the system isn’t the employee’s fault. Begrudging an employee a tip when they didn’t create the system that means living wages aren’t paid is petty and curmudgeonly. And the system is embedded there now and will be very hard to ever change.