DIY: Wood Porch Package Shelter with Solar Powered Camera

writ­ten 6/8/26; updat­ed 6/15/26



Overview

What

Shel­ter for pack­age deliv­ery

Why

Cov­ered area from the ele­ments for pack­ages

Time and Effort

Time: 2–3 Days

Effort: Mod­er­ate


Supplies, Equipment, and Cost


Bought Mate­r­i­al

Exte­ri­or Wood Screw Ass­rt Kit

Min­wax Wood Filler 16oz

XL Rec­tan­gu­lar Feet Rub­ber Bumpers

(0.59″ H x 3.00 L x 1.51″ W)

#10, 1½” Truss Head Wood Screws (80ct)

Tapo C400 Solar Out­door Cam­era Kit

Goril­la Water­proof Patch Seal Spray (x2)

Varathane One Step Stain+Spar Exte­ri­or

Sand­ed Ply­wood 2332″ x 2′ x 4′ sheet

Woost­er Short­cut 2″ Paint­brush

Cost

$15.99

$11.98

$16.99

-

$9.99

$49.99

$29.92

$29.98

$28.20

$7.47

Total

$200.51

Owned Sup­plies

1x4 Wood

2x4 Wood

1x2 Wood

Masks

Eye Pro­tec­tion

Gloves

Hear­ing Pro­tec­tion

Impact Dri­ver

Drill Dri­ver

Cir­cu­lar Saw

Driver/Drill Bits

Wood Screws

Cord­ed Sander

Sand­pa­per

Squares

Pen­cil

Mea­sur­ing Tape

Spac­ers

Clamps

Work­ta­bles

Wet/Dry Vac

Option­al: Spring Loaded Cen­ter Punch, Rub­ber Shims


Schematics, Measurements, Wood Needed

These are the mea­sure­ments I end­ed up with. Feel free to make it to any desired dimen­sions for your space

Sor­ry, I’m ter­ri­ble at draw­ing per­spec­tive

Wood Used

Type/Size

2x4

1x4

1x2

-

Ply­wood 2′ x 4′ x

2332″ Sheet

-

-

Misc

Length

22¼”

18″ & 14″

14″ & 22¼”

20½” & 1½”

18⅜” x 17″

6″ x 17″

4½” x 10½

4½” x 7⅝”

4½” x ¼”

Amount

x4

x4(18″); x2(14″)

x2(14″); x2(22¼”)

x1(20½”); x3(1½”)

x1

x2

x1

x1

x1

Total Length

89″ (7.42′)

100″ (8.33′)

-

97½” (8.125′)

-

-

-

33.375″ (2.78′)

Scrap

Sum­ma­ry

Wood Prod­uct

2′ x 4 ‘x 8’

1′ x 4′ x 8

1′ x 2′ x 8

2′ x 4′ x 2332″ Ply­wood Sheet

Amount Need­ed

1

1 + 0.33″ *

1 + 0.125″ *

1

*NOTE: So, could buy more or use just a lit­tle less in the the under­body and any place nobody will notice


Process

Dis­claimer: I am NOT a pro­fes­sion­al, just an ama­teur DIY­er. This is chron­i­cling how I went about com­plet­ing this dreamed-up idea

Planning, Measuring, Gathering Materials

  • Con­sid­er mea­sure­ments, dimen­sions, over­all shape, and any sup­port pieces need­ed for the desired loca­tion
  • Gath­er nec­es­sary mate­ri­als and equip­ment
  • Decide if a secu­ri­ty cam­era is desired: where/how to mount it, pow­er source, abil­i­ty to rotate remote­ly, stor­age options, sub­scrip­tion options, cord length, etc.
  • Decide upon fin­ish: stain/paint, seal­er, water­proof­ing, etc

Dry Assemble

  • Since it was going to sit out­side in the ele­ments, I want­ed to ele­vate it off the ground as well as pro­vide air­flow and drain­ing since it’s wood after all. For the spac­ers, I used some ran­dom pieces of dou­ble reflec­tive insu­la­tion that hap­pened to be the right size
  • Test­ing out the sup­ports and try­ing to decide if I want­ed them on the ground of rest­ing on the bot­tom cross-pieces

Plywood Cutting

SAFETY FIRST! It is high­ly rec­om­mend­ed to use eye pro­tec­tion, gloves, shoes, and hear­ing pro­tec­tion when using pow­er tools. You can even wear an apron to pre­vent a mess on your clothes. Also, cut­ting wood makes a huge mess, so plan accord­ing­ly.

Roof Panels

  • Ooo, this part made me real­ly ner­vous. The tricky part was try­ing to mea­sure how much is need­ed to have a straight mansard style roof (at least I think that’s what it’s called) that I was plan­ning for the project. After a lot of uncer­tain­ty, I just went for it.
  • I decid­ed to cut the side pieces first before the main large mid­dle piece. You can see in the right­most image that I was try­ing to cal­cu­late how much I’d need for the mid­dle one.

This unfor­tu­nate Spot­ted Lantern­fly nymph was in the way of my cut mid­dle roof pan­el and got squished.

Miter (Angled) Cuts with a Circular Saw

  • I don’t have a miter saw any­more. When I moved, I got rid of my nice com­pound miter saw thanks to lack of space and use. With no desire to buy a new one ($200–500!!), I found out that you can actu­al­ly use a cir­cu­lar saw to make angled cuts!!
  • Just find the release, set the angle, and voila!

Check that angled cut!! This was 45 degrees

  • With boost­ed con­fi­dence, I went ahead and made all the cuts that I had mea­sured out before, angled includ­ed, with the help of a speed square
  • Mis­take #1: Spa­tial stuff is not my forte. As it turns out, two 45-degree sur­faces togeth­er make a square… Which is not what I was going for. What I want­ed was a 45-degree sur­face mat­ed with a 90-degree sur­face. Whoops.
45-degrees mat­ed with 45-degrees
45-degrees mat­ed with 90-degrees

This image shows how the side pan­els have 90-degree sides and the mid­dle pan­el has 45-degree cuts.

  • Let’s set that aside for a lit­tle bit

Assembling the Base

  • Lay out and ori­ent the base as planned, ensur­ing the spaces are cor­rect
  • Flip it upside down, care­ful­ly, and fix the spac­ers again, mak­ing sure every­thing is ori­ent­ed cor­rect­ly (use a pen­cil to mark the wood)
  • Dry-fit the rub­ber feet to desired ori­en­ta­tion. I chose the long way

Note: Giv­en the size of my struc­ture, if I were to do it again, I’d spring for anoth­er 2–4 rub­ber feet. As I only have 4, if you push back­wards on the struc­ture, it tilts until it hits wood instead of being as sta­ble as I’d like it to be

  • Secure every­thing with clamps so they don’t move around
  • Grab screws (I used #8 ‑1¼” wood screws for the wood which comes with a bit)
  • Get the dri­ver with drill bit and impact dri­ver
  • Mark holes, mak­ing sure to leave room for the rub­ber feet
  • Secure the base togeth­er by first drilling pilot holes, then dri­ving in the screw
  • Secure rub­ber feet using appro­pri­ate­ly sized screws (mine were #10, 1½” Truss head Wood Screws)
  • Option­al­ly, use a spring-loaded cen­ter punch to help mark the holes

Secure Supports

Time to add the roof sup­ports. This not only holds the roof, but also adds sta­bil­i­ty to the base

  • Clamp to work­space
  • Decide where screws will go, and mark them
  • Drill pilot holes, then dri­ve in the screws with the impact. Don’t sink them into the wood until every­thing is in place. Can’t stress the pilot hole enough here.

Note: you may need to get cre­ative with the clamp if you don’t have one long enough. I end­ed up drilling one hole, then insert­ing one screw to bet­ter hold the wood in place to dri­ve in anoth­er before doing the rest


Assembling the Roof

  • Mis­take #2: Mis­cal­cu­la­tion of roof pan­el sizes

Yeeaaaaah… It’s too short (at this point, I’d already secured the pan­els togeth­er. I did­n’t write that out yet, because the sizes are wrong)

  • Now that I’ve com­plet­ed the project, I can now tell you that for the 26⅜” span of the com­plet­ed roof, I need­ed 6″ side pan­els x2, and an 18⅜” pan­el for the mid­dle. That’s a total of 30⅜” length of ply­wood (so, 26⅜ : 30⅜ ratio, which is an increase of 4″ com­pared to the span)

My Fix

  • Instead of hav­ing to cut a dif­fer­ent piece alto­geth­er, I decid­ed to do a bit of a Franken­stein job. The cos­met­ics would­n’t mat­ter for the roof, as I already planned to cov­er the entire thing with a rub­ber water­proof­ing
  • So, I cut an addi­tion to the mid­dle roof­ing piece, angled to attach togeth­er into a flat plane
  • After mulling over how to secure any of the roof to the struc­ture, I decid­ed to use a tech­nique that you nev­er see used in con­struc­tion of a roof for a good rea­son. Basi­cal­ly, I used pock­et holes to secure the miter-cut pan­els togeth­er and used wood glue to improve adhe­sion. With my lack of wood work­ing expe­ri­ence and skill, my attempt at this was pret­ty bad, but hey, it worked. See for your­self:

Assembling the Rest of the Roof

  • After some dry-fit­ting, more cuts were made, uti­liz­ing scrap wood to help sta­bi­lize the clamped struc­ture for trim­ming

It looks sooo baaaad. And it was hard to line the holes up. Again, pilot holes are 100% a must!!

  • After I real­ized that I’d made an error in the mea­sure­ments, I had to back out some of the screws, and then screwed in only 1 of the side roof sec­tions to the struc­ture to facil­i­tate the addi­tion of the rest of the roof and mea­sure­ments
  • Some dry-fit­ting, more cuts, uti­lized scrap wood to help sta­bi­lize the clamped struc­ture for trim­ming
  • To secure the big, heavy piece to the rest of the struc­ture, I need­ed to get cre­ative with how I’d sta­bi­lize it all to drill into the sup­ports
I used a chair, a buck­et, and many pieces of scrap wood
  • I used the Glue-and-Screw method along with longer screws, know­ing full well that all the weight would be press­ing into these 4 sup­ports
Glue
Screw
Real­ly long screw. It’s super hard to dri­ve in straight, so I just used 1 per sup­port and tried my best

Tip: I used a method where I would drill pilot holes, then dri­ve a screw part­ly in just so the tip sticks out, which can there­fore be “caught by” a pilot hole, then impact­ed in the rest of the way. This is help­ful if you have dif­fi­cul­ty see­ing how the holes line up togeth­er. You can see this in the mid­dle image above

  • Roof com­plete! It ain’t pret­ty, but it works!
Very bad look­ing
But, hey!
Super messed up on this one and did­n’t want to redo it

More Supports

To help fur­ther sta­bi­lize the struc­ture, I added side and roof sup­ports

Side Supports

  • Total of 4, using 1″ x 2″ wood, but only 3 for now

Roof Support

  • Dry fit, cut, glue, and screw (from bot­tom-up and top-down)

Camera Support

Camera Setup and Design

  • For the cam­era, I chose a sta­t­ic, solar-pow­ered one for this. Look­ing back, I kind of wish I’d cho­sen one that could be rotat­ed remote­ly, but this was cheap­er.
  • Find the mount­ing plate for the cam­era, and decide how it should be mount­ed on the struc­ture, tak­ing the cord attach­ment, length, and pow­er source into con­sid­er­a­tion
  • Set up the cam­era first, charg­ing it, con­fig­ur­ing it, and iron out any stor­age stuff
  • Dry fit every­thing, and deter­mine what is need­ed to secure it to the struc­ture
  • At this point, I lugged the unit out­side to ful­ly test the cam­era place­ment and make the deter­mi­na­tion for fur­ther mod­i­fi­ca­tions

Assembling the Camera Supports

  • Mis­take #3: Using small 2x4 blocks, and too large of screws
  • I want­ed the cam­era to set a lit­tle fur­ther back in a small, cov­ered alcove, if you will, so the width of a 2x4 was per­fect
  • Mea­sured, cut, drilled pilot holes, marked place­ment, then drove in screws…
  • …Only to find that the wood screws I bought were too big, the 2x4 too small and frag­ile:

So much for that

  • H’OKAY, THEN… just ply­wood it is
  • Mea­sure, cut, drill, screw part­way, place, screw ful­ly
  • Cut a tee­ny tiny bit of scrap to fill the lit­tle space between the roof and what juts out the back, then drill, and screw (glue, too, if desired)

Install Camera Mount

Note: In ret­ro­spect, I should have wait­ed until after the staining/sealing to do this because I end­ed up get­ting stain and seal­er all over the mount

  • Using either any pro­vid­ed tem­plates, or just a pen­cil, mark the holes
  • Choose appro­pri­ate screws and screw­driv­er
  • Dou­ble-check pic­ture on cam­era and hand access
  • Drill pilot holes, then screw in the mount

I men­tion “hand access” because you want to be able to remove, adjust, main­tain the cam­era, so if you can’t eas­i­ly loosen/tighten the mount attach­ment, then life just got more dif­fi­cult

Preliminary Clean-Up

  • Good time to tidy up equip­ment, mate­ri­als, and mess
  • Used the shop vac to clean off every­thing, includ­ing the unit
  • From here on out the only equip­ment need­ed will be sand­ing mate­ri­als, wood filler, sealant, and paint/stain stuff

Wood Filler

  • Using either a tack cloth or a damp tow­el, wipe any excess dust/wood par­ti­cles from the unit
  • Using a mix­ture of your hand and a put­ty knife, fill in holes and gaps with the wood filler. I start­ed with the put­ty knife but just end­ed up using my fin­gers. Gloves could be help­ful

Note: Wood filler can come in dif­fer­ent col­ors. If you’re choos­ing to use just a clearcoat seal­er, take this into con­sid­er­a­tion

  • Vac­u­um again. Wood filler is messier than I thought it would be

Sanding

My least favorite part of wood­work­ing

  • Wait until the wood filler is dry (read the instruc­tions, usu­al­ly 2 hours)
  • Sand the unit using a mix­ture of pow­ered ran­dom orbital sander and sand­pa­per for the hard­er to reach places
  • This will not only sand the rough areas smooth, but it will remove any pen­cil marks

Safe­ty first! Use eye and res­pi­ra­to­ry pro­tec­tion

Stain/Paint and Sealers

Safe­ty!! Seal­ers and stain are inhala­tion and spon­ta­neous fire haz­ards. Wear appro­pri­ate pro­tec­tion (eye, skin, res­pi­ra­to­ry), work in well-ven­ti­lat­ed areas (e.g. out­side), and have good dis­pos­al set­up ready (I always have a tray of water to sub­merge any stain-soaked equip­ment in)

Roof — Waterproof Sealer

  • I decid­ed to use Goril­la Brand Water­proof Patch + Seal because I’ve used it before on gal­va­nized met­al for an out­door dec­o­ra­tive item. It worked real­ly well and still with­stands sun and weath­er

Note: This prod­uct makes a mas­sive mess and smells ter­ri­ble. I rec­om­mend an apron, gloves, card­board bar­ri­ers, painter’s tape, pro­tec­tive work­space cov­er­ings, and work­ing out­side

  • With every­thing cov­ered well, and using a piece of card­board, spray away!
piece of card­board to catch over­spray

Before and After:

This is what hap­pens when you don’t use gloves. Since it’s water­proof, it was a night­mare to clean off. Wear gloves!!

  • I used an entire can on the first round, so I had to buy anoth­er one for the sec­ond round the next day. That means that it was able to cure overnight.
Wear­ing gloves this time

Stain + Spar Urethane

  • As the 2nd coat of roof seal­er was dry­ing, I decid­ed to just go ahead with the stain before the day heat­ed up (I was under­neath the deck, so there was shade)
  • I had the water tray set up to put every­thing the stain touched to pre­vent any spon­ta­neous fires (YES, they can cause fires, espe­cial­ly if you ball them up!!)
  • Gloves were real­ly nice not just for clean-up rea­sons, but to get stain where the paint­brush would­n’t reach well. You can also use a rag to apply the stain.
  • I did 2 coats (2‑hour dry in between with light sand­ing), and made sure to get 1 coat on the bot­tom of the unit, too
  • Remem­ber: Stain gets dark­er when ful­ly cured. I orig­i­nal­ly thought that the col­or was a bit light, then when I came to look the next day, it was as adver­tised on the can
Did­n’t end up using near­ly as much as I thought I would
Douse any­thing that has stain on it!!

Attach Camera

  • All that’s left to do now it to install the cam­era!
Just screws right in!

ALL DONE!!!

Notice the solar pan­el on the ground… Maybe I should secure it to a dif­fer­ent piece of wood?

Notes

  • You can put flow­ers on top. This was my orig­i­nal plan, but I need­ed to find a shal­low bowl pot to look bet­ter on top. This has not been done yet because the one I found is over $20 and I already spent enough on this darn thing
  • I used rub­ber shims to square up the feet
  • So far deliv­ery peo­ple have used it maybe 20% of the time which I find obnox­ious. Like­ly, it’s because they’d rather chuck my stuff up the stairs than actu­al­ly go up. The first per­son to use it was FedEx who put my stuff on top. *sigh* I think I might need to put up a sign? Did­n’t want to make it look more tacky

1 week later — Cracking

  • Went out and saw that after a week of super high heat and spon­ta­neous pow­er­ful storms, the roof seal­er was crack­ing and peel­ing!! It’s inter­est­ing to note that the shady side looks com­plete­ly fine, while the side that gets all the sun is crack­ing. Was it applied to heav­i­ly? Did it cure prop­er­ly? Def­i­nite­ly sun dam­age, though, because any video door­bell there will have its lens destroyed by sun with­in 1.5 years. I was super dis­ap­point­ed that it only made it 1 week.
  • In response, I quick­ly bought anoth­er Water­proof Patch & Seal, except this time it was a tape. This is the stuff that’s sup­posed to work under­wa­ter to seal off a leak.
  • Peel­ing off the pro­tec­tive plas­tic is a demon, but this will def­i­nite­ly not crack. I hope.
More peeled off as I was adding the new tape…
  • It does look a lit­tle janky, but what­ev­er. If I cared enough, I’d get anoth­er rub­ber­ized seal­er and cov­er this with that. Per­haps I’d try the paint-on kind this time instead of the spray which is so messy and glob­by. Will update if I end up doing that. I’m going to see how well this prod­uct works, first.

DIY: Cutting My Own Hair Super Short with Updates

writ­ten 12/29/25, updat­ed 6/8/26

What

DIY hair­cut. I like super short hair

Why

Sav­ing mon­ey and time, get­ting the cut I want not what the hair per­son thinks

Time & Effort

Time: 1–1.5 hours

Effort: Easy-Mod­er­ate

Direc­to­ry

Click to Nav­i­gate!

Materials & Cost

Bought Supplies

Wahl Prof Mag­ic Clip V9000 Cord­ed

The 360 Mir­ror

Alli­ga­tor Hair Clips

Hair Styling Scis­sors

Total

$82.99

$39.99

$5.99

$11.99

$140.96

Owned Supplies

Hair Cut­ting Cape

Comb (clip­pers come with one)

Water Spray Bot­tle

Broom and/or Vac­u­um Clean­er

Process

What fol­lows is the orig­i­nal, very first hair­cut I did myself Decem­ber 2025 where I was real­ly ner­vous. Skip to the bot­tom for Notes and details on my sub­se­quent cuts

Prepping

  • Gath­er sup­plies and clear any rugs or any­thing else in the cut­ting area. Lit­tle hairs will fly! Keep every­thing with­in easy reach
  • Secure the cape
  • Fol­low man­u­fac­tur­er’s instruc­tions on oil­ing the clip­per. The thing I read before­hand said to put one drop on either side of the blades and then back
  • Grab the spray bot­tle and comb, then mist the hair so that it’s mild­ly damp but not sop­ping wet

I could­n’t find a spray bot­tle, so I used a wet comb and that does not work very well

  • Then comb straight so that all the hair lays flat
My hair is at least 2 inch­es too long
  • Know the game­plan. Appar­ent­ly, the rule of thumb for close cuts is to do the sides then the back first. Because I want­ed to keep the top a bit longer, I need­ed to alli­ga­tor clip the hair there out of the way so I could deal with it lat­er

The prob­lem with such large clips is that they get in the way of the clip­per

Cutting!!

  • Start­ing time!! The rec­om­men­da­tion is to use the clip­per guards and to go more con­ser­v­a­tive first. You can take away hair but not put it back.

To start, I used a #4 guard to address the sides. The tech­nique is cut straight into the air and to NOT fol­low the curve of the head just yet.

Deep Breath! LET’S DO THIS!

Right Side

Before
After

Hmm… Did­n’t wet the hair enough, so it was real­ly dif­fi­cult to cut the strands

Left Side

Before
After

Wet it more this time and it was eas­i­er. The only hard part was using my left hand instead of my right

  • Now for the trim­mer! Using the trim­mer and/or the cor­ner edge of the clip­per (no guard), fold the ear and trim around the con­tour

This trim­mer was TERRIBLE. The on/off switch was lit­er­al­ly impos­si­ble to flip and for the num­ber of times you need to do that, it was super obnox­ious and hurt my fin­gers. That’s what hap­pens when I decide to go cheap

left
right

Inter­est­ing­ly, my hair is dif­fer­ent on both sides. In the end, I knew I’d need the help of scis­sors to pol­ish it off

  • Now for the back. I stuck with the #4 guard to take the bulk off. Uti­liz­ing the side mir­rors by turn­ing either left or right to see more (you have to use the mir­ror in the mir­ror effect), I was able to take off the bulk of the length. The straight back, I used a two-hand­ed motion sim­i­lar to that dumb­bell exer­cise
Before
After
  • Now there are those lit­tle strands in the back. I decid­ed to use the trim­mer again. This part was super hard because I could­n’t see any­thing and no amount of phone or mir­ror could help me. In the end, I just used the comb as a straight edge. I knew I’d want anoth­er per­son to help me out lat­er.

They sell these back of head guides that you can secure around your fore­head

  • And for the riski­est part: Fine tun­ing. With the bulk gone, it was time to do detail work. If the length was good for a trim, I would’ve been fine, but I did­n’t want that. I want short­er!

Stu­pid­ly, I went straight from the #4 to a #1 for what­ev­er dumb rea­son. If I was sea­soned, it’d be fine, but I was brand new to this!! So, of course, I made a mis­take.

Whoops. Too much, too fast

  • After laugh­ing ner­vous­ly, I decid­ed to fix it. Slow­ly this time. I went from a #3, to a #2, then a #1. Each guard num­ber I went all over with until I got used to wield­ing the clip­per.

I actu­al­ly was­n’t intend­ing to ever go back to the #1, but I did in the end because it was the only way to get the bot­tom of the back to hug the skin and look more nat­ur­al.

Help­ful: Just because you use a guard does­n’t mean you’re lim­it­ed to it. On the side of the clip­per is a lever that fur­ther con­trols the length. So, using a #3 plus the lever effec­tive­ly gives you #3.1 — 3.9. This allows more con­trol to fine tune and is how I end­ed up fix­ing the hair and feel­ing com­fort­able with the rest of the fine-tun­ing process. It ends up being a tri­al-and-error/prac­tice thing.

  • After fix­ing every­thing, I felt much bet­ter and things were look­ing good as a whole. Now for the mid-tier! I swapped to the #6 to do the curve of my head, then the #4, and even­tu­al­ly #3 (only a lit­tle)
  • For the oth­er side of my head, I removed the clips, combed, then added the clips the oth­er way this time. Time to cut!
Before
After
  • More fine tun­ing all the way around. This is where I final­ly fig­ured out how to prop­er­ly use the tri-fold mir­ror.

The female head has a much more pro­nounced dip/roundness in the back than a typ­i­cal male head, so I had to take that into account

Hmm. I missed some on the right side
  • Hap­py with the sides and back, nor­mal­ly, this is where Hair Scis­sors come into play. Alas, I did NOT have any. I also knew bet­ter than to use reg­u­lar scis­sors or the clip­pers. I would have thinned and lay­ered the top using a 2‑finger hold and cut method, then fine-tuned the con­tours of the ears.

And DONE!

Go clean up and take a show­er!

Before and After Pictures

Notes:

1st Cut — 12/27/25

Very free­ing and so much eas­i­er than I thought it would be! A few hic­cups in the learn­ing process, but over­all, I can see myself doing this for years to come. The tri-fold mir­ror was instru­men­tal in all of this! I would high­ly rec­om­mend it! I’m already imag­in­ing oth­er styles I can try in the future! It’s nice to not only save mon­ey, but do this at my own leisure, in my own house!

  • I need­ed some­one else’s help for the scis­sor-work and con­tour­ing of the back and ears, so I have yet to try that myself. Should­n’t be too hard. I’ll update when­ev­er I do that in the future.
  • While the longer top style-wise was­n’t too bad look­ing, I can’t staaaaand hair in my face, so it just got annoy­ing
  • If using the large hair clips, make sure to push them way up high or they’ll get in the way of the clip­per
  • Def­i­nite­ly use a spray bot­tle
  • I did­n’t real­ize the back of my head is so bumpy. If the pic­tures look like I chopped to much in some places, it’s actu­al­ly because of my head struc­ture

2nd Cut — 2/21/2026

Dura­tion: 10:30am — 11:14am (45 min­utes)

Cut in the kitchen this time which was much bet­ter and brighter than the bath­room. Messed up AGAIN in the same spot because I for­got to return the clip­per lever to the low­est lev­el which means that, yet again, I need­ed to use the #1 guard to smooth it out. It went much faster than the first time because I not only felt more com­fort­able as a whole, but I prop­er­ly uti­lized the 360 Mir­ror. Vac­u­um clean­er is much eas­i­er than broom and dust­pan. Short­er to start this time around and short­er to end with. Also did not have scis­sors and had help for the final touch­es yet again.

LEFT: Pre-cut; CENTER: Messed up in the low­er cor­ner, so had to cut on guard #1 to smooth it out; RIGHT: Post-cut (you can see how the top is very long)

3rd Cut — 4/12/2026

Dura­tion: 11:21am — 12:26pm (1 hour 5 min­utes)

Hair was short­er to start with, but longer to end with than pre­vi­ous iter­a­tions (most­ly because I did­n’t mess up as bad­ly). This time employed scis­sors to help, so it took a bit longer to com­plete, but the detail work is bet­ter. Still messed up when try­ing to use the comb + clip­per method to detail towards the top. Looks bad, but not as bad as the bot­tom of the hair­line. It’s real­ly nice to be able to cut when­ev­er I feel like on my own. This time, I’m going to add some more notes to the process now that it’s more stream­lined.

  • Wet and comb through­out the process
  • Pin hair as desired
  • Choose a Guard - Used #3 with the clip­per lev­el on the short­est set­ting
  • Clip the sides and the back using the 360 mir­ror — Use the mid­dle to start, then the mir­ror-in-the-mir­ror images (i.e. When cut­ting the right side, look to the left; When cut­ting the left side, look to the right). Use an under­hand hold and cut upwards.
Under­hand hold for the back
Mir­ror-in-mir­ror image with scis­sors
  • Ear and Back Detail — Wet, comb, then use scis­sors and/or mini clip­pers. BE CAREFUL!! This is the eas­i­est place to mess up!
  • Short­en and Fade as desired. Used #2 guard ON THE LONGEST CLIPPER LENGTH first, then at half lever for the mid­dle, and then the short­est on the low­est por­tion of the head. Use a scoop­ing motion with the clip­per to pre­vent sharp edges
  • Detail Time — I removed 2 hair clips and then went in small incre­ments with the clip­per lev­el. Be care­ful if you’re try­ing to use the comb as a guard to help. That’s where I messed up this time… heh… heh… Sigh.
  • Scis­sor Work — First time using scis­sors. I read some­where that the best way to cut bangs is to use the comb as a guide and do ver­ti­cal snips to make it look more nat­ur­al. I’m not going for bangs here, but I fig­ured it worked sim­i­lar­ly?
  • Final Touch­es — Look all around for even­ness. I ran the guard­ed clip­per around again to make sure all the areas were cut and found that I’d missed the upper back cor­ners near the top of my head

Com­plete!

Pre-cut
Post-cut

4th Cut — 6/7/2026

Dura­tion: 12:05 — 12:52pm (47 min­utes total)

I was amazed at how long my hair got in such a short time, but look­ing back, this is actu­al­ly a longer inter­val than usu­al. Appar­ent­ly, with hair this short, I need to cut it every 1.5 months. This was clos­er to 2 months. Used the notes from the last appt to help and, over­all, I felt extreme­ly con­fi­dent now that I’ve done it sev­er­al times. I think next time I’ll just start with the #2 guard… Using #3 first helps cut down on bulk so it does­n’t over­whelm the clip­per, but I’ll try to start with it next time. This ses­sion, I did­n’t even both­er using the mini clip­per at all and just used the scis­sors. It is high­ly rec­om­mend­ed and I took it away from the orig­i­nal post. It’s safer, more detailed, and I even test­ed out lay­er­ing a lit­tle. Most­ly hap­py. Still need­ed help to touch up lat­er because the hairs around the ears are too hard to get, that back and top of my head are hard to reach, and espe­cial­ly because I’m right-hand­ed. A lit­tle ner­vous about lay­er­ing. Will do more of it next time. Much short­er time dura­tion than last time! Because the detail work is much bet­ter, I was very hap­py with the out­come and with­out major mis­takes, I don’t have to wear a hat when I go out!

Left: Before; Right: After (I can see lit­tle fly aways in the very top back, but the top has much less bulk than pri­or ses­sions)