Yaseen's Barbershop, Grand Rapids, Michigan. We 💜 beards and mustaches.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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Cuteness overload alert: Neymar meeting a little fan [09/07/‘16]
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I think Yaseen's made his point💈👍👌😎
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صاروخ🚀مادييرا Sarukh Madeira #yaseensbarbershop #shavedlines (at Yaseen’s Barbershop)
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Occasionally men’s fashion or grooming will show up here so I thought I’d mention this stuff.
Old Spice may have the advertising budget to make you think the other old brands don’t exist, but find this stuff and wear it. It is the best-smelling aftershave out there, and who doesn’t want to smell like a man from the 1800s?
This is the real deal. Give it a shot. Whiskey Trail Approved.
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, December 15, 1889
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Missouri, September 6, 1908
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Thanks for coming Ranu. You're looking sharp 💈👍👌
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The Mustache Cup and the Mustache Spoon
In the 1860′s mustaches became popular again in common fashion, often leading to very intricate styles and impressive whiskers. However, the new rise in mustaches came with a number of complications for mustachioed gentleman, especially when it came to consuming food and beverages. Not only could food or drink stain or soil a perfectly manicured mustache, but heat from hot beverages could melt the wax used to style mustaches.
In 1860 an Englishman named Harvey Adams came up with a solution to this problem called the “mustache cup”. The mustache cup was a special cup with a ledge inside it on which the mustache rested, thus protected from the contents of the cup. The shelf had a small slit in it, allowing the passages of fluids without making contact with a mustache. Mustache cups instantly became popular in Britain, then quickly spread all over Europe and North America. Today mustache cups are making a small comeback and producers are making their own versions of an old classic. Most can be found for sale online. Obviously inspired by the mustache cup, a New York man and spoonmaker by the name of Solon Ferrer invented the mustache spoon, which featured a ledge on the side of the spoon designed to protect the user’s mustache.
The popularity of mustache cups and spoons continued into the 20th century. Popularity began to wane in the 1920′s as mustaches became less common, eventually dying off in the 1930′s.
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Australian bearded sailors attempting a trim.
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