HAIR-RAISING JOB

I collect human hair – my old workplace inspired me to start this hobby for an unusual use

A HAIRDRESSER found an unusual way to help the environment using material that most people wouldn't think of off the top of their heads.

Adele Williams has been a hairdresser for nearly a decade that had worked all around the world when the Covid pandemic prompted her to start her own workshop.

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Adele Williams, a hairdresser wanted to find a sustainable way to help the environment when she went on lockdown from CovidCredit: Instagram/@greenwavehairworkshop
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“A lot of individuals donate to me; if they have a haircut they will send me an envelope of their hair. I'll get a package in the post and it'll be hair again, it is quite strange.”

She said that her experience as a hairdresser makes it so the thought of touching hair and heads “doesn’t creep me out” as it would for other people.

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“And, most of the hair that is sent to me is washed and cleaned anyway,” Adele added. “When I receive hair from individuals, I leave for three months in case there is anything in there. But I have never actually found anything unpleasant.”

Adele made her first mat in November 2020 and has since made about 100.

She said the mats absorb at least four times their weight in oil and she’s tested them using several different methods.

The process takes about two hours but Adele says that with two people, it can be about 45 minutes.

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