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Xiong Gaowu cleans his customer’s eye using a straight razor in Chengdu, Sichuan province. Photo: Reuters

Blink and you’ll miss it: meet the Chinese street barber who will shave the inside of your eyelids

While customers and the man wielding the razor insist the ‘blade wash eyes’ tradition is perfectly safe, for some reason others are less convinced

Chinese street barber Xiong Gaowu deftly scrapes a straight razor along the inside of his customer’s eyelid.

“You should be gentle, very, very gentle,” said Xiong, who performs traditional eyelid shaves at his roadside location in Chengdu, the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan.

Customers swear by the practice of “blade wash eyes”, as it is known in Mandarin, saying they trust Xiong’s skill with the blade.

“No, it’s not dangerous,” said 68-year-old Zhang Tian. “My eyes feel refreshed after shaving and I feel comfortable.”

Xiong, 62, said he learned the technique in the 1980s and serves up to eight customers a week, charging 80 yuan ($12) per shave.

“It was difficult at the beginning, but it became a piece of cake afterwards,” he said.

The technique appears to unblock moisturising sebaceous glands along the rim of the eyelid, said Qu Chao, an ophthalmologist who works at a nearby hospital in Chengdu.

A customer takes selfie with Xiong Gaowu as he prepares to get to work. Photo: Reuters

“Patients will feel their eyes are dry and uncomfortable when the glands are blocked,” she said. “When he is shaving, it is most likely that he is shaving the openings of these glands.”

She said there was a risk of infection if the equipment was not sterilised.

Xiong carries the tools of his trade on a motorbike. Photo: Reuters

“If he can properly sterilise the tools that he uses, I can still see there is a space for this technique to survive,” Qu said.

While customers insisted their eyes felt better after a shave, onlookers cringed at the sight of Xiong wielding his razor.

“I am afraid to do it,” said He Yiting, 27, who winced as she watched.

The barber cleans the straight razor he uses for the ‘blade wash eyes’ procedure. Photo: Reuters
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: A very close shave with the barber of Chengdu
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