#grooming

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 4

  • @TheTuffOnes
    @TheTuffOnes Год назад

    I truly appreciate your video. I use a Wahl Motion set to 10 and i DO go in between the pads on the feet. I was taught that you have to do that and not just glide over it so I just got in the habit of doing that. I've never had a problem, thankfully!
    One thing I found very helpful is to do her rear and hold them toward me. Strangely, it seems that if she can see what I'm doing she'll get a little wiggly but if I do it from behind she doesn't mind.
    I was truly hoping to see how to make pillar legs. I can't figure out how to do it to save my life and I'm taking my little girl out of the Asian Fusion bell bottoms for summer and want to do an even pillar leg like the one in this video* which is an advertisement for shears. I certainly do not want those naked poodle-type feet on my Maltese 😮 but I very much desire learning to make those pillar legs.
    Could you create a video for that please? I've ordered new curved shears and a new curved lending shear already. Since I started grooming her myself, a couple of years ago, I have gone through one after another after another of the cheapo products shesrs. They always start off great on the first haircut and buy the second one, I'm standing there wondering why the Harrison looks so choppy when I did such a good job on it the month before 🙄 Only grooming one tiny little 5 lb dog it is amazing that the cheap shears become expensive... VERY expensive! I would have been far better off starting out with good ones from the get-go. The cheap turnout expensive 😉
    Thank you!
    *www.amazon.com/vdp/05bb8f154a2f44d09360440e6909e9f6?ref=ive_share_mshop_detail

    • @GroomAtHome
      @GroomAtHome  Год назад +1

      Yes, blending the legs in an Asian fusion trim is tricky. I will have to make a video about it. Right now I am growing her into full coat. :)

    • @TheTuffOnes
      @TheTuffOnes Год назад

      @@GroomAtHome
      Thank you! 🙂

    • @TheTuffOnes
      @TheTuffOnes Год назад

      @@GroomAtHome
      I have figured out how to do it. You make three "square" cuts ("box" in... square is really the wrong word but I don't know which word to use) on the front and then curve up the back. Then use curved blending shears to make them into round pillars. I was stunned at how easy it was to do once I got my hands on curved blending shears.