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Denver Mall
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Personal Care
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History of Barbers --> Barber's Pole |
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Leetsdale Mall Denver |
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Leetsdale
Barbers
"A Traditional Barber Shop"
600 S. Holly Street
Denver, Colorado
David Grady
303.388.0454 |
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Hours:
Tues & Wed
8-5
Thurs & Fri 8-6
Saturday 8-4 |
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| Comments: Friendly and warm place
to get a hair cut, reasonably priced. -- Aharon |
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A barber's pole is a type of sign used
by barbers, a pole with white and red stripes. They
have however been known to be of different colors. For
example, it was common practice to have black and
yellow stripes in the City of Baltimore, Maryland
until the early 20th century in honor of the Calvert
Colors used by Lord Baltimore.
Origin of barber pole in hairdressing
and surgery
The origin of the barber pole is associated with the
service of bloodletting.[1] During medieval times,
barbers also performed surgery on customers. The
original pole had a brass basin at the top
(representing the vessel in which leeches were kept)
and bottom (representing the basin which received the
blood). The pole itself represents the staff that the
patient gripped during the procedure to encourage
blood flow.
The red and white stripes symbolize the bandages used
during the procedure: red for the blood-stained and
white for the clean bandages. Originally, these
bandages were hung out on the pole to dry after
washing. As the bandages blew in the wind, they would
twist together to form the spiral pattern similar to
the stripes in the modern day barber pole. The barber
pole became emblematic of the barber/surgeon's
profession. Later the cloths were replaced by a
painted wooden pole of red and white stripes. |
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After
the formation of the United Barber Surgeon's Company
in England, a statute required the barber to use a
blue and white pole and the surgeon to use a red pole.
In France, surgeons used a red pole with a basin
attached to identify their offices. Blue often appears
on poles in the United States, possibly as an homage
to its national colours. Another more fanciful
interpretation of these barber pole colours is that
red represents arterial blood, blue is symbolic of
venous blood, and white depicts the bandage.
Prior to 1950 there were four manufacturers of barber
poles in the United States. In 1950, William Marvy of
St. Paul, Minnesota started his barber pole
manufacturing business. Mr. Marvy made his 50,000th
barber pole in 1967, and by the early part of 1996
over 74,000 poles had been produced. The William Marvy
Company is the sole remaining manufacturer of barber
poles in North America. In recent years, the sale of
spinning barber poles has dropped considerably, both
because very few new barber shops are opening and many
jurisdictions prohibit moving signs of any kinds as
unsightly or visually disrupting.
Optical illusion
A spinning barber pole is the basis for a famous
motion perception illusion, in which the stripes
appear to be traveling down the length of the pole,
rather than around it.
In an episode of Dragnet in the 1950s, Friday and
Smith stand in front of a barber shop at one point.
The shop has a double barber pole and the spirals turn
outward, and so the illusion is of an arch moving
upward. |
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