Kevin
Carter’s reasons for coming to Oulu are
difficult to argue with. Working in a fashionable
hairdressers in London and Brighton (where he’d even
cut the hair of the odd pop star), Kevin had been
cutting a Finnish women’s hair for a while when he
asked her out. After dating for a few years, ‘she
found herself pregnant and wanted to have her child
back home because she thought it was a safer place!’
Looking back on it, Kevin thinks she was probably
right. ‘London has a lot going on’ he smiles, ‘but
here there are no muggings, there’s no drug problem.
It’s a good environment for a child.’
Always Interested in Fashion
Dressed all in black, including a black tie,
Kevin tells me that ‘I’ve always been interested in
fashion’ and ‘changing appearance’ and this is one
of the reasons why he got into hairdressing when he
was seventeen . . . that and going to the
hairdressers with his mum when he was a kid and
being given ‘lollipops.’ Kevin had worked in salons
in central London and Brighton – such as Toni and
Guy – before coming to Finland in 2001.
He found work quite quickly. ‘I just asked around
different hairdressers,’ he remembers. ‘It didn’t
take long. I was very lucky. Kevin would simply walk
into hairdressers with his CV and certificates and
ask if there was any work. Quite quickly, one of the
salons offered him work.
This kind of confidence, Kevin thinks, is normal
if you want to be a hairdresser and is maybe why
language hasn’t been that big of an issue. ‘If you
can create good styles and you know what you’re
doing and you can keep them happy then language
shouldn’t be an issue,’ Kevin points out.
Like Auditioning for a Film
‘It’s a bit like auditioning for a film,’ he
says. ‘You do tests. You’ve gotta have good social
skills, without being big-headed of course. It’s a
part of hairdressing. You’ve gotta talk to people
all through the day and adapt to situations even if
they’ve got a different point of view from you.’
Kevin now works at Salon Sara and hasn’t found his
less than fluent Finnish to be a problem . . . and
nor has his boss or clients.
‘In the first place I worked at, they’d mainly
book the English-speaking customers for me and for
the Finnish speakers my colleague could speak
English quite well and she’d translate what the
customer said into English if needed.’ Kevin
insists, though, that despite going on various
courses, the Finnish language has been very
difficult to learn.
‘I know enough to tell them about their hair,’ he
smiles. ‘But I normally start off by saying I’m from
England and I understand a lot but can’t speak much.
Sixty percent of them say, “Oh yeah! Then we can
speak English!” I’m thankful for that! It makes my
life easier!’ The younger customers in particular
are happy to speak English but Kevin also gets
middle-aged businessmen and housewives who also like
to practice their English skills. He charges between
32 and 40 euros to cut a woman’s hair and 26 euros
for a man.
Finns Appreciate the Fine Details
His advice to foreigners looking for work is to
have their qualifications, CV and every part of
their work history – no matter how small – sorted
out and presented.
‘The exact details of your education . . . It’s
best to have it all prepared and there together.
Finns appreciate the fine details.’ He also advises
‘confidence’ which he thinks that some foreigners
especially are good at coming across as to Finns . .
. but without being ‘brash.’
Though Kevin has separated from her mother, he
has stayed in Oulu to be close to his now seven
year-old girl and he fumbles around in his leather
jacket trying to find a receipt for a toy he bought
which she already has so he can exchange it when we
finish the interview. But there are things about
home that he misses. ‘Friends and family of course .
. . and being able to walk to the supermarket and
get pretty much anything I fancy! You need to shop
around here and sometimes I can’t get fresh
ingredients!’ Kevin is also a budding amateur chef.
Finnish Extremes
Apart from the ‘cold’ weather, there are many
things about Finland that Kevin has had to get used
to.
‘The culture’s a little bit closed . . . sort of
reserved . . . but if you get to know people then
they can be quite friendly, you know . . . kind of
beneath the ice!’ The ‘extreme’ difference between
the ‘reserve’ of Finns and their extraordinary
‘friendliness ‘after a few drinks’ has also amazed
Kevin.
‘Finns are really proud of their country,’ he
observes. ‘Like at Juhannus, you know, you get these
festivals where everyone goes to the forest and the
sauna . . . it’s kind of vaguely Pagan . . . but
they're in the sauna they see the English guy so
they make it as hot as possible, you know . . . this
Suomen Sisu . . . they can endure extremes!’
‘A Walking Advert for Me’
But Kevin is very happy working for Salon Sara.
‘It’s a relaxed place and there’s a good bunch of
stylists capable of producing a cool new look for
any customer,’ he tells me.
And the ‘look’ is particularly important to
Kevin. ‘I wouldn’t be prepared to do a style that
didn’t look good even if the customer asked for it,’
laughed Kevin. ‘People whose hair I cut are a
walking advert for me. I’m not gonna just take the
cash and make someone look stupid! Then none of
their friends’ll want me to cut their hair!’
‘But if any English speaking expats or anyone who
likes to speak English wants a cool haircut then
come and see me!’ Kevin says as we make our way to
the toy shop to exchange his little girl’s present.
Edward Dutton |