Barbering as a real skill, taught by people who do it
Kralves started as a small local workshop. We figured out what works in actual barbershops and built a program around that — not around theory textbooks.
Where do people go after training?
Not everyone comes in with the same goal. Some want to open their own place. Others want a steady chair in an established shop. We teach the same technical foundation — and help you apply it to your direction.

Employment-ready skills
Focus on fades, texture work, and client communication — things shops actually screen for when hiring.
Running your own chair
Covers pricing logic, booking flow, and building a returning clientele from scratch.
Teaching and mentoring
For experienced barbers looking to pass skills on — how to structure sessions and give useful feedback.
Typical learning path
Khmelnytskyi, UA
The seminars are structured around repetition and feedback — not watching demonstrations and hoping things click. Every session includes hands-on work, and instructors give specific notes, not general encouragement.
We keep groups small so everyone gets enough chair time. That's not a marketing point — it's the only way this kind of learning works.
What it costs
Three access levels, depending on how deep you want to go. No hidden fees, no upsells mid-course.
- 12 seminar hours
- Clipper & scissor basics
- Reference guides PDF
- Group Q&A sessions
- Completion certificate
- 28 seminar hours
- Fades, blends & beard work
- Live client sessions
- Instructor feedback rounds
- Resource library access
- 44 seminar hours
- Straight razor + skin work
- Business fundamentals
- 1-on-1 review sessions
- Priority rebooking access
After ten years of running seminars, we have a pretty clear picture of where students struggle, how long specific techniques take to click, and what separates the ones who stick with barbering from those who don't.

What's included in the learning kit
Beyond the seminar hours themselves, students get a set of supporting materials — useful both during training and after.
Technique breakdowns
Step-by-step written guides covering every technique taught in the seminar, with diagrams.
Tool & product reference
An honest guide to what equipment actually matters at each stage — without brand sponsorships.
Discussion boards
Ask questions, share work, and get notes from both instructors and past students.
Practice session scheduling
Book optional extra practice time at the workshop space between seminar blocks.
Assessment records
Written notes from instructor reviews — something concrete to look back on and track progress.

Kralves vs. other options
Online tutorials, vocational schools, self-study — all valid. Here's how they differ from what we do, without overstating it.
| What you're comparing | Kralves seminars | Generic alternatives |
|---|---|---|
| Hands-on practice included | Every session | Varies widely |
| Group size | Max 8 per cohort | Often 20–30+ |
| Instructor feedback | Per-student written notes | General or none |
| Real client sessions | From week 3 onward | Rare or end-only |
| Local context | Khmelnytskyi market | Generic or foreign |
| Post-seminar support | Discussion boards + rebooking | Typically none |