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Rohan Balgobin brings antique barber chairs back to life in Houston (photo courtesy of Urban News Service)
Curtis Bunn, Urban News Service
Published: 15 May 2018

Not many were onboard when Jon McDaniel decided to honor his late father-in-law by having his 1950s barber chair restored. “Who does that?” was the common refrain.

Then they saw the finished product. 

“Amazing,” Jon McDaniel, said with a hint of satisfaction. His friends quickly agreed.

McDaniel admired his wife’s father, Dan Stringer—a World War II navy veteran, who enlisted the day after the Pearl Harbor attacks. A patriot at heart, he joined when the navy had few African-Americans, on shore or at sea. Stringer learned to be a barber while serving overseas. When he returned to his native Cherokee County, some 40 miles north of Atlanta, he bought a Kohler Presidential barber chair and started cutting hair in his basement. (His day job? County Sheriff.)

With a life story like that, McDaniel knew his father-in-law, who passed away 29 years ago, needed a unique memorial. He weighed many different ideas. Eventually, he thought of the discarded, dusty hunk of metal in the basement—Stringer’s old barber chair.

To McDaniel’s surprise, there is a mini-industry devoted to restoring barber chairs. He found Custom Barber Chairs (CBC), a three-man company that specialized in resurrecting barber chairs that are older than Sidney Poitier.

barber chairs gold medSid Tutani of Custom Barber Chairs refurbished the chair of Dan Stringer, a World War II Navy veteran, to the delight of his son-in-law Jon McDaniel (Photo courtesy of Urban News Service)

A few weeks after the guys from CBC picked up his rusting relic, McDaniel visited their Atlanta-area shop. “The chair was laid out in a million pieces,” he said.

“I thought, ‘Oh, my god.’”

By the time Sid Tutani, one of CBC’s owners, had worked his magic, McDaniel uttered the same expression, only in a different context.

The restored throne boasted McDaniel’s beloved Georgia Tech logo in the center of the back, chrome and porcelain details, and hydraulics that worked like new. “It was the best thing I could have done,” McDaniel said. “He [Stringer] meant so much to me and did so much for the country. His chair is probably better now than it ever was. When people come to my ‘man cave’ downstairs, it is a show-stopper.”

McDaniel paid $5,200 to restore his father-in-law’s legacy. “Worth every penny,” he said.

McDaniel’s is just one of many satified customers, as Custom Barber Chairs has flourished in its unique business niche.

The business began eight years ago, when Kwame Innis noticed a photo of an antique chair in an obscure magazine. Impulsively, he bought a 1930s model for his home, but found it difficult to find someone to refurbish it.

Exasperated, he called friends Tutani in Atlanta and Rohan Balgobin in Houston, fellow photographers and website designers. He hoped they would see his vision and be willing to learn how to teach themselves—through trial and error—to restore vintage barber chairs. “Friends I could really trust because I knew this could take off,” Innis said.

Tutani and Balgobin quickly came onboard.

“I was open to the idea because at the time, I had moved from New York to Texas and things had slowed down,” Balgobin said.

“I was always good with my hands, fixing things and working with my Dad at his mechanic shop. And I liked the idea of us Black men doing something with antiques. We carved a space.”

Tutani, however, did not see it that way. Not at first. “I was like, 'What? Restore barber chairs?What? But pretty quickly, I got it. It's a unique niche.'”

The men had no specialized training in restoration and could not find classes on how to renovate the chairs. So they taught themselves, learning as they went, watching YouTube videos that gave pointers on elements of the unique chairs.

Over time, they perfected the craft.

“There were no formal classes anywhere,” Balgobin, 46, said. “The companies that made the chairs had all closed. We found some schematics on Google Patent, but nothing on how to fix them. We just learned over time.”

Innis, 51, said, “It took us about eight months to restore that first chair. It was trial and error. I probably spent $7,000. Knowing what I know now, it probably should have cost about $2,000. But I love the chair.”

Innis explained his motivation.

“It took me back to my childhood when my grandfather would take me to the barbershop.”

Now, they have customers from across the globe. They've restored and shipped chairs to Africa, Australia, Canada, Europe, South Americ, and all around the United States.

CBC’s restored chairs have been featured in HBO’s "Boardwalk Empire," the film "Barbershop III," and countless photo sessions.

Ironically, most of their clients are collectors wanting an antique chair in their home or “man cave” instead of the traditional recliner.

A thorough restoration job can take up to six months and cost up to $12,000, Innis said, making the chairs luxury items.

“We take the chair apart, fix the upholstery, sand blast the porcelain, polish the metal and rebuild the hydraulics,” he explained. “It’s almost like (the TV show) 'Pimp My Ride.' The work we do depends on what the customer wants.”

One of their orders featured a Sistine Chapel decal.

“With the right budget, we can do anything imaginable,” Tutani said.

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