Why Now Is The Ideal Time To Learn To Blow Dry Your Hair

If you’ve never quite got to grips with the skill of blow drying, you’re certainly not alone. We know there’s nothing quite like leaving the hairdresser after having a blow dry and feeling like a million dollars, but, for the time being at least, that’s a luxury we’ll all have to forgo.
Kat De Rozario, a stylist at Josh Wood Atelier, told Stylist
that because of the changes being introduced as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, blow dries at the hair salon are likely to be off the cards, at least for a while.
“Due to the potential risk of the virus being transmitted through swift airflow and to reduce the time and volume of people in salons, what is apparent is the need to cut down, or out, blow drying the hair,” she asserted.
So, if you’re not able to go to your hairdresser to have a blow dry, what can you do? The solution might be simpler than you think: you could join an Essex blow dry course
to teach you how to recreate that ‘just stepped out of the salon’ look in the comfort of your own home.
Of course, hairdressers across much of England reopened on 4 July, to many people’s delight. But they looked very different to the pre-Covid days, with stylists wearing PPE and customers asked to wear their own masks and gloves while in the salon.
Speaking to Wales Online, Tim Hartley, a former director at Vidal Sassoon, predicted that more women will opt for bob cuts and other low maintenance styles as a result of the new restrictions.