Tirnol Iru

Hands-on hair cutting training with experienced instructors in Kharkiv

Learning to cut hair without knowing where to start

Most beginners spend months watching tutorials and practicing on mannequins, but still freeze when they face a real client. The gap between knowing techniques and actually applying them feels impossible to bridge.

We pair you with working stylists who teach through real sessions, not demonstrations. You start with fundamentals on day one and gradually work up to full cuts, with instructors guiding every decision until it becomes natural.

See the program
Instructor demonstrating precision cutting technique

Who teaches here

Our instructors work in salons and teach between appointments. They remember what it's like to be confused by the basics because they still solve problems daily. This keeps their teaching grounded in what actually matters on the floor.

Andriy Kovalenko portrait

Andriy Kovalenko

Technical training lead

Andriy spent eight years at a high-volume salon before switching to education. He focuses on teaching students to read hair texture and adjust techniques accordingly, something most courses skip entirely. His students typically start taking clients within three months of finishing the program.

Viktor Shevchenko portrait

Viktor Shevchenko

Client interaction specialist

Viktor runs private consultations and teaches the communication side of haircutting that most programs ignore. He shows students how to handle consultations, manage expectations, and fix mistakes gracefully. His methods come from years of working with difficult clients who taught him what actually works under pressure.

How learning actually works here

We don't have a fixed curriculum because everyone arrives with different skills and struggles. Instructors assess where you are in the first session and build a path from there, adjusting as you progress.

Student practicing under instructor supervision

Initial assessment session

You perform a basic cut while an instructor watches and takes notes. This shows them what you already know, what needs fixing immediately, and what can wait. Most students are surprised by how much they've been doing wrong without realizing it.

Technique correction phase

Your instructor works on fixing foundational problems through repetition and direct feedback. This usually takes four to six sessions where you practice the same movements until they become automatic. It's not exciting, but it prevents bad habits from becoming permanent.

Supervised client work

You take appointments with real clients while your instructor stays nearby. They intervene only when necessary, letting you make small mistakes and learn to correct them. This phase typically lasts several months as you build confidence and speed.

Independent practice review

Once you're working on your own, you can book periodic review sessions to troubleshoot specific problems or learn advanced techniques. Most graduates return a few times in their first year when they encounter situations they haven't handled before.

What the sessions look like

Close-up of texturing technique demonstration
Student receiving feedback during practice session

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