"2013-02-05T00:00:00"^^ . "0"^^ . "I've seen Teresa twice at Dino Palmieri and have been pretty pleased with her.\n\nI'm definitely not a girly girl, and my morning hair routine is to roll out of bed, brush my hair, and put it in a ponytail/bun. Related, I tend to wait FOREVER to get it cut, until the split ends are just too much to bear. Needless to say, my hair was not looking so hot when I went to Teresa for my first cut.\n\nShe definitely knows her hair - I just wanted to cut off my ragged layers, but she convinced me to re-do them and to get them not quite as short. The resulting look was MUCH better and I was pretty happy with it.\n\nMonths later, I decided to try to lighten my hair with Sun-In. Terrible idea. I thought it looked good at first, but once my roots starting showing I could see that it 1) looked bronze and 2) looked awful. I booked an appointment with Teresa to just dye my hair back to my natural color (my first dye ever!)\n\nTeresa did a pretty good job - my parents didn't even realize it was different. She's fun to talk to and gave me a good cut afterwards (it had \"only\" been six months since my last appointment with her!)\n\nMy only complaint is that it was a bit hard to convince Teresa that I really did want my boring color back, and that more complex cuts were not the way to go. I completely understand that she is the expert, and I'm sure that was she was suggesting would have looked amazing - however, as someone who spends about 5 minutes on my hair in the morning, and specifically said that I didn't want to do any maintenance on my color, those looks are sadly not for me. \n\nBut can I really complain about someone trying to make me look my best? Nope!\n\nThe hours are pretty flexible here, although parking is terrible (I just walk from my apartment). Both times I've gone, the staff has asked if I wanted to buy product there, but never pushed it, which I appreciate.\n\nThanks Teresa and I'm sorry I'm too lazy to have the great looking hair you want for me!"^^ . "0"^^ . . . "0"^^ . "4"^^ . .