Thu, 8 January 2009 Post By Online Shopping Store
- Kit includes both a trimmer and a clipper.
- Self-sharpening, high-carbon steel blades for precision and durability.
- Thumb-adjustable taper control.
- Included case.
Beginning with design concepts from popular home fashions, we transform our ideas into lighting fixtures that blend timeless beauty with today's styling. As our designs take shape, we make sure that a high standard of quality goes into manufacturing each fixture. From the casting and forging to the hand-painted finishes and fine details, we strive to make our products the best in the industry. |
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With the Wahl Combo Pro 14-Piece Complete Styling Kit, keeping up your haircut is easy to do at home. Perfect for total body grooming, this haircut kit is used by a wide variety of people for their haircutting needs, including professional cyclists, swimmers, and other athletes to trim body hair.
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* High carbon steel blades are precision ground to stay sharp longer * Hair clipper for great looking haircuts * Fine tooth trimmer for trimming close of sideburns, around ears and neckline * K14 piece kit includes one single cut clipper, one performance trimmer, one blades guard for clipper, one blade guard for trimmer, oil, one cleaning brush, one pair of scissors, one durable storage case, six guide combs include 1/8", 1/4", 3/8", and 1/2", one left ear taper, one right ear taper, English and Spanish instructions and styling guide, and 2 year limited warranty |
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Wahl Combo Pro Complete Styling Kit
Wahl hair clipper with high-carbon steel blades that are precision ground, they stay sharp longer. Use this clipper to create the perfect style and the multi-purpose battery operated trimmer to finish up around the neckline, sideburns and ears. Trimmer requires 2 AA Batteries.
The Brand Used By Professionals
Includes:
Clipper
Trimmer
Blade guard for clipper
Blade guard for trimmer
Blade oil
Cleaning brush
Scissors
Durable storage case
Six Guide Combs
1/8" (3mm)
1/4" (6mm)
3/8" (10mm)
1/2" (13mm)
Left ear taper
Right ear taper |
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Released in 1981 at the peak of the klezmer revival bubbling up in urban folk circles, the first album by this still-important neotraditionalist ensemble hues hard to the letter and only slightly less to the spirit of Eastern Europe's funkiest dance music to date. Folky yet swinging, frolicsome yet yearning, the klezmer canon had mostly been relegated to dusty attics by the time Boston Conservatory pianist Hankus Metsky formed this 14-piece group, which at the time included such subsequently groundbreaking bandleaders as trumpeter Frank London (who went on the form the Klezmatics) and jazz clarinetist Don Byron. The KCB performs these memorable folk tunes, melodic theater hits, nostalgic ballads, and lively dances borrowed from the repertories of famous klezmer bands of the 1920s and '30s with clarity, respect, and the excitement of rediscovery. --Richard GehrTags : Yiddishe
Renaissance
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Like Ireland, Cape Verde is a former island colony which has perennially lost its young people to emigration. And like its Irish counterpart, Verdean music is filled with songs of separation and homesickness. Cesaria Evora, the greatest Verdean singer of her generation, includes several of those songs on Cabo Verde, her sixth album overall but only her second release in the U.S. With a population descended from former Portuguese colonialists and former African slaves, Cape Verde closely resembles Brazil and has produced a music with similar rippling syncopation and light, sensual vocals, though the Verdean sound is marked by the breezy lilt characteristic of islands. But when Evora sings mournfully of a "Partida" (departure) that will take her love far away, anyone who has ever experienced such a separation will recognize the mix of pain and affection in her voice. That voice is a very special instrument, for it glides gracefully over the supple beat even as it resounds deeply in Evora's lower range and fills up with warm, enveloping resonance. She is backed by a small, all-acoustic Verdean combo led by the ukulele-like, four-string cavaquinho. American jazz great James Carter plays tenor saxophone on "Coragem Irmon," but Evora has no problem matching his thick, buttery tone. --Geoffrey Himes |
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Released in 1981 at the peak of the klezmer revival bubbling up in urban folk circles, the first album by this still-important neotraditionalist ensemble hues hard to the letter and only slightly less to the spirit of Eastern Europe's funkiest dance music to date. Folky yet swinging, frolicsome yet yearning, the klezmer canon had mostly been relegated to dusty attics by the time Boston Conservatory pianist Hankus Metsky formed this 14-piece group, which at the time included such subsequently groundbreaking bandleaders as trumpeter Frank London (who went on the form the Klezmatics) and jazz clarinetist Don Byron. The KCB performs these memorable folk tunes, melodic theater hits, nostalgic ballads, and lively dances borrowed from the repertories of famous klezmer bands of the 1920s and '30s with clarity, respect, and the excitement of rediscovery. --Richard GehrTags : Yiddishe
Renaissance
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