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Greenwashed and Dyed: Nori's Eco Salon

Nontoxic hair color under the shredded-denim ceilings of a Greenopia-recommended beauty parlor

Though it’s surely not a record to be held for long, Nori’s Eco Salon in Encino is the only full-service green beauty salon in Los Angeles. As the push toward greater ecological sustainability continues, now even your hair — the stuff you put in it, the place you get it done — can be green.

Kristin Burns

Dye it green: Roza Adjory gets to the roots of a customer’s hair
Kristin Burns
Dye it green: Roza Adjory gets to the roots of a customer’s hair
Sister Roya Adjory works the phones
Kristin Burns
Sister Roya Adjory works the phones

(Click to enlarge)

Dye it green: Roza Adjory gets to the roots of a customer’s hair

Kristin Burns

(Click to enlarge)

Sister Roya Adjory works the phones

Kristin Burns

(Click to enlarge)

Kristin Burns

(Click to enlarge)

Some places may slap in an energy-saving bulb or two, but owner Roya Adjory and her sister Roza have gone the distance. If it can be eco, it is eco. The counters are PaperStone. The ceilings are insulated with shredded denim. The walls are coated with paint that contains zero volatile organic compounds. The light bulbs are compact fluorescent. The furniture is either recycled or made with certified sustainably harvested wood. Business cards are printed on recycled paper with soy-based inks. The floor is formaldehyde-free and made of jute backing and cork with linseed oil, which exudes a fragrance that has prompted people to remark, “Wow, it smells so earthy in here.” And if she can sweet-talk the landlord into it, Roya will install solar panels on the roof of the mini-mall complex that houses the salon.

“I’ve made it onto Greenopia as a four-leaf salon,” Roya says proudly of her mention on the urban consumer Web guide to green services and products. “It’s the highest leaf you can get.”

But for her customers, the most important adjustment may be in the dye that goes directly onto their heads.

“None of the findings are conclusive,” says Roya, who runs a hand through her own hair, recently chopped into a sleek Joan of Arc crop that shows off her large eyes and high cheekbones. “But they are discovering certain hair-dye chemicals in the tissue of people who have cancer. In baby boomers especially, who are going gray and have been covering up for 10 years, they’re finding signs of accumulation of toxicity. Especially if you don’t do any kind of cleanse, or whatever. Nobody talks about it because it’s a very chemically intensive industry.” The scalp, she adds, has the highest blood circulation in the body. Dye toxicity is also increasingly becoming a concern for the people who work in the beauty biz. Stylists are exposed to the fumes and pigments every day.

Roya herself used to get sores inside her nose from the fumes wafting off the expensive Italian hair dyes. But since she switched to the sulfite-free, ethanolamine-free EcoColors line — voilà! — the sores disappeared.

On this scorching-hot day in the Valley, when it seems like the makeup on your face might slide off from the heat, and global warming feels imminent, the salon talk isn’t about melting glaciers and drowning polar bears. Instead, as Roya’s sister Roza blow-dries a woman’s hair, talk turns to their life in Iran. Their mother, the Nori for whom the salon is named, ran a salon in Iranian Azerbaijan, the Turkish northwest section of the country.

“My sister was beaten up in Iran,” says Roya.

“What happened?” I ask.

What what happened?” Roza sighs. “Everything happened.”

Roya describes being a fashionista and shoe freak obsessed with Charles Jourdan and miniskirts in the small town in which they grew up. But then came the Iranian revolution in 1978. Things got bad, then worse. Islamic fundamentalism became the dominant force in the land, with all aspects of corrupting Western culture banned under punishment of death. You could wear lipstick but risked being whipped in the street. What price, beauty? Nori pushed her salon underground.

Soon, even that was not enough and Nori closed down the salon she ran for 42 years to move to America and set up shop. Roya, unable to gain entry to Iranian universities, left for college in the States. Roza, who was beaten up in school, eventually followed, escaping with their father by way of Germany. If there is a striving now within them to live and let live, to cause no harm, you might trace those roots back to their turbulent days in Iran.

After a while, Nori herself emerges from the back room. A small woman, almost 70, with bright-red lips and large, impeccable hair, she doesn’t say much. She just smiles and tends to a girl who wants an up-do — Nori’s specialty — for prom.

Roya went back to Iran recently, as part of Global Exchange, with a group of 21 other women, for the first time in more than two decades since moving to the States. It was disturbing on one level. Eco-wise, it is a disaster, Roya reports. It’s polluted. Old cars and scooters belch smog into the streets. There are no clean-air or clean-water regulations. There are, however, plenty of regulations governing the lives of women, who are forbidden from beautifying, lest it sexually arouse the men.

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  • Art W 12/15/2008 11:13:00 AM

    It is so good to see businesses trying to be more ecologically responsible. I know Fantastic Sams in Long Beach is doing their share. They are encouraging people to use Gopons mobile coupons instead of clipping or printing paper coupons. It's kind of cool when you see your business discount on a cell phone screen. I'm sure as mobile coupons grow in popularity, then more businesses will join the bandwagon. Congratulations to Nori's Eco Salon for helping move the cause one step forward.

  • Dottie 08/05/2008 4:30:00 AM

    I enjoyed this article. Informative, and addresses current needs for our health. Thank you for sharing an insight into a culture that we have little experience. The entire article makes me rethink my home and my personal grooming. Thanks.

  • tamen 08/02/2008 11:41:00 AM

    Nice article - We should all think green with the help of God.

  • susan 08/02/2008 1:23:00 AM

    Roya is an amazing woman. I would like to try her Salon. Great idea, to be able to cleanse the evil or toxicity out of our system through our feet.

  • Naty Mendoza 08/01/2008 6:24:00 PM

    Great article! From an eco hair salon to global issues. Insightful with a trace of humor. Way to go, Gendy. Keep writing.

  • Kevin P. 08/01/2008 3:09:00 AM

    i used to dye my hair blue in highschool. wonder if that was toxic. if so it would explain a lot!

  • cory key 08/01/2008 1:35:00 AM

    very interesting article. it makes me want to go to eco salon and have my hair done. very informative writing top credit to the writer..

  • Juniper Lee 07/31/2008 11:45:00 PM

    What does she mean by "cleanse"? Does that refer to hair or something else? I wish there were some way that the author of the article could answer my question, but I guess they don't participate in these comment pages.

  • teresa tedesco 07/31/2008 10:34:00 PM

    so great!! loved the article. Thanks

  • teresa tedesco 07/31/2008 10:14:00 PM

    so great!! loved the article

  • stuart tielens 07/31/2008 6:26:00 PM

    Good reading. Very good writer.

 

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