hairdressing chairs for sale cape town

hairdressing chairs for sale cape town

hairdressing chairs for sale australia

Hairdressing Chairs For Sale Cape Town

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Buy Now, Pay Later Get all your favourite professional salon brands now, and pay them off monthly with MobiCred Spend R500 or more and get FREE DELIVERY within South Africa Get exclusive value bundles where you get free items with every purchase! See current value bundles Revlon Uniq One Super10R Hair Mask 300ml Redken Triple Take 32 Hair Spray 300ml Revlon Professional Revlonissimo 45 Days Conditioning Shampoo 275ml Revlon Uniq One Loutus Flower Hair Treatment 150ml SO Miraculous Leave-In Treatment 120ml SO Groomed Texturising Paste 100gr SO Blonde Sulphate-Free Conditioner 300ml SO Twisted Curl Magic Styling 200ml SO Essential Sulphate-Free Conditioner 300ml Kerastase Reflection Chroma Captive Coffret Kerastase Nutritive Magistral Coffret Kerastase Nutritive Magistral Bain Duo Kerastase Reflection Chroma Captive Duo SO Blonde Combo (Free Gift) SO Repairing Combo (Free Gift)Welcome to Atlanta Barber and Beauty Supply




Professional Products - Great Service - Low Prices Order online or call us to find out why professionals have trusted us for Barber Supplies since 1946 Have a question about a product? Give us a call or send an email: Shipping Policy: Standard Shipping is always FREE on orders $70 and up (to 48 states - AK, HI are higher - click here for more details or call 1-800-969-5666).  If your order is less than $70 a shipping charge of $8.95 will be added at checkout. Andis Blackout T-Outliner Blade Andis Blackout T-Outliner Limited Edition Wahl Finale Shaver - Lithium Ion Apron Gold Old Fashioned Andis Master Clipper in Purple We are an authorized dealer for these professional clipper brands:Home»Our Products»Salon chairs ambala ludhiana jalandhar chandigarhSalon Chairs Ambala Ludhiana Jalandhar Chandigarh The right hair styling chairs make your clients comfortable our showcase of styling chairs gives you so many seating options in the salon , and they’re all durable, attractive, functional, and affordable.




We carry both the contemporary and traditional designs that complement other salon furnishings and blend with a range of interiors. Choose from chrome, black vinyl or wood armrests on your styling chairs. Order a square, rounded, or cubed back. Look through our reliably hydraulic styling chairs available in prices to match your professional budget. The styling chair features you need are here, including: Solid round, or balanced five-star bases Heavy duty, cushioned upholstery Stylish armrest and functional footrest options Smooth, hydraulic action for height adjustments Chair back styles from round to cubed Fully reclining seats A sensational selection of hair styling chairs ,salon chairs and barber chairs Comfortable hair styling chairs that work dependably are business assets. We’re here to help when it’s time for replacements by offering a wide selection of hair styling chairs with welcoming seat widths, durable fabrics, comfort cushioning, and sleek chrome styling. For the barber, we offer economical options, as well as all-purpose shop chairs with the longer, durably padded seats.




Our ultimate barber chair has a bold look with its wider seat and deeper padding. Adjustable head and foot rests, heavy duty hydraulics and reclining mechanisms merge in a hair styling chair clients hate to leave!The styling chair features you need are here, including: A sensational selection of hair styling chairs ,salon chairs and barber chairs Solid round, or balanced five-star bases Heavy duty, cushioned upholstery Stylish armrest and functional footrest options Smooth, hydraulic action for height adjustments Chair back styles from round to cubed Fully reclining seats Comfortable hair styling chairs that work dependably are business assets. The styling chair features you need are here, including:   Solid round, or balanced five-star bases Heavy duty, cushioned upholstery Stylish armrest and functional footrest options Smooth, hydraulic action for height adjustments Chair back styles from round to cubed Fully reclining seats A sensational selection of hair styling chairs ,salon chairs and barber chairs Comfortable hair styling chairs that work dependably are business assets.




Tell Us What You Are Looking For? Or view all businesses for sale Set up your Private Seller Account and create your listing today Set up your BrokerWeb Account and list multiple businessesShop online and choose between 2 convenient delivery options: standard courier delivery (FREE for orders over R300) or collect your order in store (FREE for orders over R150) Send us your pictures  ·  Send us your stories We are Africa’s largest hair care nation – and the market looks set to keep growing. ­Gugulethu Mhlungu breaks down the black hair industry’s commercial trends Before deciding to go bald in 2006, I made an enormous contribution to the hair care industry by buying thousands of products and spending hundreds of hours relaxing, washing and trimming. I cannot count the number of conversations I had with my mother and grandmother about the state of my hair. Or the endless conversations about hair at my various schools. I often heard the phrase “beauty is worth suffering for” as the relaxer or hairdryer started burning my scalp.




I can, however, quantify the 12 or so hours it took to braid my hair that one time when I was seven or eight and how I vowed to never do that again. I’ve also lost count of the (significantly fewer but still substantial) hours and rands I have spent since 2006 on shaving my head. Even without it, I can’t seem to escape paying for my hair. You could argue that the hair care industry is up there with prostitution as one of the oldest on the planet. Hair is big business, and is going to be for a long time. The global hair care product market hit sales of R750?billion in 2010, and is forecast to reach just shy of R1?trillion by 2015 – sales of shampoos and conditioners will be the biggest contributors. It is estimated that there are 10?000 new products introduced to the market annually. Earlier this year, Reuters reported that estimates put Africa’s dry hair industry at R66?billion a year. South Africa’s black hair care industry is estimated to be valued at R9.7?billion a year, and was in 2010 considered to be the largest in Africa by The Professional Hair Care Market SA 2010 report.




Research on the hair care industry is limited, but it suggests that relaxing remains the most popular treatment in South African salons, accounting for an estimated 80% of all business. South Africans can choose from a variety of products for treating and maintaining relaxed hair. The leaders in the local hair relaxing space are multinational companies such as L’Oréal (Dark and Lovely), Unilever (Sunsilk and Motions) and Sofn’free. L’Oréal is reportedly looking into building on its line with more research into African hair and skin, and now has factories in South Africa and Kenya that produce almost half the products it distributes on the continent. The globe on your head Second to hair relaxing is the very broad category of “African styling”, which is used to refer to braiding, hair extensions, dreadlocks, bonding and the infinite variations of these. Today there are more than 100 brands of hair in South Africa, the bulk of which are the synthetic kind from Asia.




There is also a growing demand for more natural human hair, which is sourced largely from India, Peru and Brazil. South African firm Kinky, which sells synthetic and natural hair, including extensions, braids and wigs, was acquired in 2008 by India’s Godrej Consumer Products. Brazil, India and China remain the leading suppliers of synthetic hair for South Africa. The hair is first sent to China, where it is processed into extensions and then shipped to Africa. Hair from yaks, to which some people are allergic, is now used less. Twenty years ago, Jabu Stone entered the local market with a range aimed at providing what was then the lack of hair care products for dreadlocks – a first of its kind for South Africa that revolutionised hair care in the way Herman Mashaba’s Black Like Me did for permed hair in the 70s. Jabu Stone has continued to grow its product offering and salon franchises. Seeing another opportunity, Johannah Moriti has established JO’M Cosmetics, which claims to be the first in South Africa to manufacture natural, chemical-free products.




Moriti, who is trained in analytical chemistry, wanted to make a product that would work effectively, but as she did more research, she realised the synthetic chemicals in relaxants strip and destroy the structure of black hair. JO’M is intended for the treatment of curly hair and Moriti has been surprised by the flood of interest from customers. Her products are also safe for use on children and people who are prone to skin conditions such as eczema. Euromonitor, in its June 2014 report titled Hair Care in South Africa, reports that “ethnic consumers in South Africa are increasingly demanding products that are less damaging to their hair; women particularly are shifting towards natural hair styles that are chemical-free and are trying to grow their hair out”. Major manufacturers have seen this area as an opportunity for growth and now offer herbal or non-synthetic chemical options in their ranges, such as Sofn’free’s GroHealthy and Dark and Lovely’s Amla Oil offerings – giving the likes of Jabu Stone and Johannah Moriti big competition.




In contrast to the vast quantities of international products used in South Africa’s black hair salons, the ownership of the salons has largely been local. The number of known salons catering for black people is estimated at 40?000, and about 3?000 cater for “non-ethnic hair”. The figures most likely exclude informal salons in homes. The salon space is highly competitive, given the number of alternative suppliers, which is great for consumers who have a variety of options and prices to choose from. It also remains one of a handful of industries with looser barriers to entry. It might be easier to get into owning a salon, but it’s still a tough space to get into with high set-up costs for products and equipment. The Sorbet Group, a national franchise that has spa and dry bar services, has recently ventured into the black hair care market with Candi & Co, which says it is “South Africa’s first franchised ethnic hair salon that delivers world-class hair care services that are accessible, affordable and authentically beautiful”.




Candi & Co aims to revolutionise hair care by promoting healthy hair alternatives through consultations that map long-term hair recovery programmes for damaged hair. It also offers an entrepreneurship programme for new and existing salon owners looking to go into the franchising business. Whether this foray into the salon business by large established companies is a good or a bad sign is debatable, but it speaks to a space that still seems to have place for new providers. There is no doubt that the hair care industry in South Africa, and Africa, is going to keep growing. There is no shortage of people needing to get their hair relaxed, braided, cut, washed, conditioned, weaved and dreadlocked on our rapidly urbanising continent. The size of the black hair care market in America provides a clue for the potential of Africa’s own hair care market. Reuters reported earlier this year that the value of the American market stood at R7.5?billion in 2013, estimating that it could be closer to R5.5?trillion if weaves, extensions and sales from independent beauty stores or distributors were included.

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