Monday 13 December 2010

Welcome to Sunny Hair!

Hi everyone,  and welcome to the Sunny Hair information webpage!  


If you've arrived here looking for an English speaking hairdresser in Korea, you've come to the right place!  


My name is Sunny and I'm the owner of Sunny Hair, a new hair and beauty salon in Cheonan, Korea.   Do you find yourself feeling awkward here, going to the hairdresser and not being able to communicate all that well?  Or are you avoiding hair salons, feeling like you can't fully trust Korean hairdressers to understand exactly what you would like, all because of the language barrier?


Worry no more!


I lived in the UK for several years and trained in the Vidal Sassoon International Academy in London.  Also, my husband is a native Englishman, which is something of a help!


Where are we?
We are located in Cheonan, a city located south of Seoul, in Chungcheongnam-do province.  You can find more information here


Directions:
The closest subway station is Dujeong (두정역) on Line Number 1 (the dark blue one), so you can get to us directly all the way from Seoul.  Come out of exit 1, turn right and cross over the road via the pedestrian crossing, keep walking in the same direction for about 3 blocks and you should see a Baskin Robbins ice cream store straight ahead of you, on the corner.  The salon is located a few shops down, on the other end of the same building.


Here is a photo:


You can contact me on 041-522-1878   or   010-6899-1838.


Thanks very much and I hope to see you soon!


Sunny

1 comment:

  1. I don't care if you studied in the UK- you do not know how to do proper, non-Korean haircuts. But even worse- you never give people the cuts they want! You just ignore your customers and cut their hair the way YOU want. I have watched people argue with you about the style they want and then you just cut something different anyway. You never listen unless they just want a typical Korean style cut. And it always looks so completely Korean with no layers, style, or shape. Who cares if you can speak English when you NEVER listen to anybody anyway? How can you think that your Korean-cuts looks good on everyone? Maybe some people like it- but you need to actually listen to your customers because it's their head and not yours. My two friends and I will always tell expats to stay far, FAR away from you because you may be able to understand English, but that's not worth arguing with you and then paying for a rubbish haircut.

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