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SHAGGY-HAIRED Brits have flocked to get their hair cut for the first time in months as salons reopened at midnight.

Customers have booked out barbers and hairdressers back-to-back for much-needed trims as lockdown restrictions lift.

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Secret Spa hair stylist Nas Ganev cuts the hair of Amy Pallister, 27, just after midnight at her home in Balham, south London
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Secret Spa hair stylist Nas Ganev cuts the hair of Amy Pallister, 27, just after midnight at her home in Balham, south LondonCredit: PA
Kelly Boad, owner of Hair & Beauty Gallery, gives Sue Butcher a haircut in Warwick
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Kelly Boad, owner of Hair & Beauty Gallery, gives Sue Butcher a haircut in WarwickCredit: Reuters
Secret Spa tan artist Magdelaine Gibson sprays a client just after midnight at her home in Balham, south London
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Secret Spa tan artist Magdelaine Gibson sprays a client just after midnight at her home in Balham, south LondonCredit: PA
Secret Spa offers at-home beauty services across the UK and have finally reopened for business
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Secret Spa offers at-home beauty services across the UK and have finally reopened for businessCredit: PA

Among the first to open was the Hair & Beauty Gallery in Warwick.

Hairdresser and salon owner Kelly Boad started cutting hair as soon as the clock struck 12 after months of forced closure.

She was pictured styling her first client Sue Butcher's barnet shortly after midnight.


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Secret Spa hair stylist Nas Ganev also got to work just after 12 at a house in Balham, south London.

Five housemates desperate for a trim nabbed the night's first appointments.

The pals booked in for haircuts and spray tans through Secret Spa's at-home service.

Among the first to get to work was stylist Nas Ganev in south London
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Among the first to get to work was stylist Nas Ganev in south LondonCredit: PA
Secret Spa tan artist Magdelaine Gibson prepares client Isabella Robinson, 27, for her spray tan shortly after midnight at her home in Balham, south London
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Secret Spa tan artist Magdelaine Gibson prepares client Isabella Robinson, 27, for her spray tan shortly after midnight at her home in Balham, south LondonCredit: PA
Lizzie Cundy at her local beauty salon The Lisa Harris Skin Science clinic in Weybridge, Surrey, at one minute past midnight
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Lizzie Cundy at her local beauty salon The Lisa Harris Skin Science clinic in Weybridge, Surrey, at one minute past midnightCredit: w8media

The company, which offers at-home beauty and wellness services in London, Manchester and Brighton, extended its opening hours after hundreds booked in for treatments.

Secret Spa co-owner Emily Ewart-Perks said there has been even more interest in beauty services this time round compared to the first lockdown last year.

She said bookings for spray tans were up 475 per cent as a result of "a lack of sunshine over the past five months or sight of holidays abroad".

And bookings for manicures and pedicures increased 163 per cent, waxing 127 per cent, massages 108 per cent and hair 31 per cent.

Emily said: "We are really busy on the 12th, it is so exciting, it has been a long time coming.

"We knew we were going to be busy even before Boris Johnson confirmed on Monday that close contact services could reopen, but after that announcement we saw an even bigger surge in bookings.

"This is like an explosion, there is so much pent-up demand. I think people were waiting for that date to be set in stone."

The Kentish Belle in Bexleyheath, a micropub with a 24-hour licence, serves its first pints
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The Kentish Belle in Bexleyheath, a micropub with a 24-hour licence, serves its first pintsCredit: The Sun
People queueing outside The Oak Inn in Coventry, hoping to enjoy their first post-lockdown pints mere moments after midnight
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People queueing outside The Oak Inn in Coventry, hoping to enjoy their first post-lockdown pints mere moments after midnightCredit: SWNS

Keen punters were also seen waiting patiently in line for pubs to open at midnight.

Pent-up demand will see £1.5billion — that’s £2.7million a minute — spent in venues and reopening attractions between 9am and 6pm.

Gyms reopen from 6am today, with some Primark stores opening at 7am and many cafes from 8am.

Work leave requests for today are up almost 20 per cent.

Some bosses will let work-from-home staff pop out for a bargain or beer.

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BrightHR, which monitors annual leave at more than 10,000 workplaces, said: “It’s fair to say April 12 is the most requested day off in the last year excluding Christmas, Easter and summer holidays.”

Sun gets sneak peak inside Wetherspoon pub in London ahead of reopening

 

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