Last December John Martin sat in on a focus group for a trend-forecasting
company at which young professionals were asked about their grooming habits.
Martin found he had nothing useful to contribute. His shaving regimen involves
the use of a razor about as frequently as the seasons change.
"Everyone else was chiming in about the products they use," said Martin, the
advertising director for Vice, a lad magazine based in Brooklyn. "I was totally
mystified. I blanked."
Martin's idea of a style symbol, seriously, is Ulysses S. Grant, whose beard
he came to admire after watching the 2003 Civil War-era drama "Cold Mountain."
Two years ago, when he began experimenting with different beard styles, which he
described as ranging from neat to burly to unkempt, his facial hair was an
expression of individuality in a tide of metrosexual conformity. Now 10 of his
15 co-workers at Vice wear full, bushy beards. In that, they vie with the
pro-facial-hair contingent of an editorial rival, Spin, where a rash of new
beards has broken out.
"It's a sign of the times," Martin said. "People are into beards right now."
At hipster hangouts and within fashion circles, the bearded revolution that
began with raffishly trimmed whiskers a year or more ago has evolved into
full-fledged Benjamin Harrisons. At New York Fashion Week last month at least a
half-dozen designers turned up with furry faces.
"This is some sort of reaction to men who look scrubbed, shaved, plucked and
waxed," said designer Bryan Bradley, who stepped onto the runway after his Tuleh
presentation looking like a renegade from the John Bartlett show, at which more
than half the models wore beards: untidy ones from wiry to ratty to shabby to
fully bushy.
"It's less 'little boy,' " Bradley said. "For a while men have looked too
much like Boy Scouts going off to day camp."
On city streets, too, trends in scruff have reached new levels of unruliness,
a backlash, some beard enthusiasts say, against the heightened grooming
expectations that were unleashed with the rise of metrosexuality as a cultural
trend. Men both straight and gay, it appears, want to feel rough and manly.
Other designers who appeared in scruffy beards during Fashion Week included
Brian Kirkby of Boudicca, Nathan Jenden and Matthew Williamson. Santino Rice
gave the look national TV exposure on "Project Runway" this season, with weekly
variations. Among the models Ralph Lauren cast in his men's show was a wildly
bearded young man with long tresses, like Brad Pitt circa 2002.
And with their fully furry chins Ariel Foxman and Bruce Pask, the editor in
chief and the style director, respectively, of Cargo magazine, the metrosexual
manifesto, seem now to be endorsing a lumberjack ideal.
"It's a nice masculine aesthetic," said Robert Tagliapietra, who with his
similarly bearded partner, Jeffrey Costello, designs a collection of pretty silk
jersey dresses under the Costello Tagliapietra label. "We both like that
aesthetic of New England cabins with antlers on the wall, plaid shirts and a
beard."
John Allan, the owner of several clublike grooming salons in New York,
reports seeing newly bearded customers, but not enough to warrant concerns for
the health of his shaving business. "It will be interesting to see over the next
six to eight months what mainland America is going to do with it," Allan said.
"For the past several years we've been stripping guys of their body hair. Maybe
now it's time for the pendulum to swing the other way."
No survey ever conducted about women's attitudes toward beards, even those
not underwritten by the Gillette Co., has indicated that more than 2 or 3
percent of women would describe a full beard as sexy.
Yet the return of the wild beard carries a certain erotic charge that has
been missing from beards since the Furry Freak look of the 1970s.
Andrew Deutsch, a designer of interactive Web videos, swears that having a
beard has changed his life, giving him an air of confidence. "I met my current
girlfriend a week after I started growing my beard in November," Deutsch said.
Now he finds himself constantly touching and stroking the beard, as if it were a
talisman. "It's like a security blanket on my face," he said.