Wet-Shave Parlor · Est. 1952

The hot towel.
The straight razor.
The same oak chair.

Seventy-three years on Oak Street. Four generations behind the chair. We have not changed the way we lather, and we do not plan to.

The House Rule

One towel for the face. One towel for the blade. A fresh blade for every chair. No exceptions — not in 1952, not today.

— Posted by the door, pressed in brass, since 1952.

The Card.

The Classic

Gentleman's Shave

Two hot-towel cycles · Pre-shave oil · Badger-brush lather · Straight razor, with the grain · Aftershave balm.


$65

The Cut

Heritage Cut

Hand-washed with tar soap · Shears only · Traditional taper · Neck finish with straight razor · Pomade set.


$55

The Pair

Cut & Shave

Both rituals, one chair, no hurry · 90 min in the parlor · Ends with a glass of bourbon and a walk to the door.


$110

Four Generations

A short history, in four chairs.

1952

Salvatore Opens the Parlor

A single chair, a brass pole, and a hot-towel warmer that still works. The tile floor is the original.


1978

The Second Chair

Tony, Salvatore's son, adds a second oak chair. The waiting list is re-drawn from scratch.


2005

The Brass Bar

Tony's daughter installs a brass espresso bar at the back. The shop now closes at sundown, not sunset.


Today

Fourth Generation Behind the Chair

The tile is still the original. The recipe for the shave lather is still the original. So are three of the customers.

Walls, windows, and old brass.

Oak chair and mirror station
Parlor interior with tile floor
Shears and clippers on leather
Hot towel finish

The Ledger

Dispatches from the parlor.

  • Barber chair

    What Walk-Ins Should Know

    Saturdays book up by ten. Drop in mid-week if you can — the chairs turn faster and there is usually espresso going.

  • Barbershop interior

    Beard Care Beyond the Trim

    Healthy beards are not just a tidy line. They start with the right oil, the right brush, and a wash that does…

The Craft

A wet shave is a slow thing, and we refuse to rush it.

Most shops in the city stopped offering a traditional straight-razor service a long time ago. The blade is slow, the ritual demands a trained hand, and the liability scares insurers. We never stopped. Our masters train a full twenty months before they hold a razor over a paying customer's face, and each of them keeps a strop at their station that has been in the family longer than most of the neighborhood has been a neighborhood.

Here is what an unhurried shave looks like: seven minutes of hot towels to open the skin. A pre-shave oil worked in with warm fingertips. Lather whipped in a ceramic mug — never aerosol — and laid on with a badger brush. Two passes, always: one with the grain, then across. A cool towel, a balm the master mixes once a month, and a glass of iced water while the balm sets. No music in the suite. No rush. That is the whole of it, and it has taken us seventy-three years to get it right.

Pay the Parlor a Visit

124 Oak Street. Knock twice.

Tue — Fri

9 a.m. until 7 p.m.

Saturday

10 a.m. until 5 p.m.

Sun — Mon

At home, with family.

Find Us

Three ways to get to the parlor.

The brass pole still spins on the corner of Oak and 4th. If you pass Luigi's Pizza on your left, you have gone too far.

— Subway

Canal St · Take the 6 or Q, eight minutes east on Oak. Exit the south stairs, not the north.

— On Foot

Twelve minutes from the courthouse, nine from City Hall, two from the side entrance of the old post office.

— Park

Three metered spots directly outside. After 6 p.m. the back alley is free — tell them Sal sent you.