Rose Gold & Designer Scissor Buyers Guide
Buy the cut first, the colour second.
A designer scissor should earn its place twice: it has to look the part and cut. Here is how to buy one that does both.
1. Match the length to your technique
Shorter blades (5.0–5.5”) suit detail, point cutting and precision; 6.0” is the all-round workhorse; 6.5”+ suits scissor-over-comb and longer strokes. Browse by 5.5”, 6.0” or 6.5”.
2. Match the handle to your hand
Offset and crane handles drop the thumb and elbow and are kinder on the wrist through a long day. A classic straight handle gives a direct feel.
3. Match the steel to your budget
See the Finish & Steel Library. Value steel is fine for a first pair; premium cobalt rewards a heavy user.
4. Match the finish to your brand
This is the fun part — and the one rule is: don’t buy on colour alone. Pick the pair that cuts the way you work, then choose the finish that fits your kit. Start with our best sellers or the rose gold range.