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Some of our most common cuts and services include:

Custom Haircuts for Men

Custom Haircuts for Men

Beard Trimming

Beard Trimming

Shaves and Facials

Shaves

Traditional Cuts

Traditional Cuts

Hot Lather Cuts

Hot Lather Cuts

Modern Cuts

Modern Cuts

Straight Razor Cuts

Straight Razor Cuts

Shampoo and Cut

Shampoo and Cut

What sets The Local Shoppe apart from your average barbershop in South Carolina? Pop into our store today and see for yourself! You might expect a room full of burly barbers, but you might be surprised. Until then, check out some of our specialty haircuts below.

Here's why:

Most Barbers Specialize in Men's Haircuts

Most Stylists Specialize in Men's Haircuts

Our barbershop, employs cosmetologists who are actually trained more extensively than stylists. Most guys don't need extensive hair coloring, but they do need an expert. That's why stylist trained as stylists are better - they focus exclusively on cutting men's hair, not pampering them with hand creams and makeup. They spend years studying and mastering hairstyles for men and build their knowledge on classic styles like the undercut and combover. Plus, seasoned stylist aren't afraid to answer your questions or suggest new ways to make you look fresh and clean.

Barbershops Offer Experiences

Barbershops Offer Experiences

If you've ever walked into a salon, you probably know that most of them have similar layouts. If you've seen one, you've seen all of them - cookie-cutter locations that you can find at your local Walmart. The atmosphere is bland and generic. Unfortunately, the haircuts are too. Barbershops like The Local Shoppe give clients a fun, relaxing experience. It's an authentic vibe that usually includes a lounge, refreshments, sports TV, and more. Unlike many salons, here at The Local Shoppe, we want to get to know you. We want to learn about your likes, dislikes, and style. We want to hear the plans you have this weekend. Our stylists aren't afraid to talk about current events or exchange a little small talk - we think that's what makes going to the barbershop great!

Barbershops Have Better Services for Men

Barbershops Have Better Services for Men

One of the biggest reasons why men choose barbershops over hair salons is that most barbershops cater their services to men. At a salon, you can get a haircut and have your hair washed. Outside of that, your options might be limited. At a barbershop, you can get your beard trimmed and shaped, your scalp massaged, and even a hot lather and shave. Few salons offer these services, and if they do, they probably don't perform them often.

The Local Shoppe Men's Haircuts and Lounge: More Than Just a Barbershop

Here at The Local Shoppe, stellar haircuts are only part of the experience. We welcome you to visit our barbershop in Isle of Palms, SC, so you can see for yourself why men flock to our shop. Maybe it's our staff of highly-trained stylists with years of experience. Perhaps it's our awesome lounge area where you can kick back, relax, and chat with the guys. Maybe it's our extensive list of hairstyles and services, like hot lathers, shaves, and custom cuts. We like to think it's a combo of all the above, mixed with a dash of good times and great people.

Contact our barbershop to learn more about what we do or schedule your custom haircut and barbershop experience today.

Physical-therapy-phone-number(843) 901-5362

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Latest News Near Isle of Palms, SC

History beneath the waves: Civil War shipwrecks shape Isle of Palms beach shore

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCSC) — As beach days return to the Lowcountry, a delicate balancing act is underway on the Isle of Palms, where efforts to combat coastal erosion must contend with Civil War history resting just offshore.About a mile out in murky Atlantic waters lie the remains of ships sunk more than 160 years ago. They were part of the Union Navy’s effort to choke off Charleston during the Civil War. Today, those same wrecks are shaping how engineers restore the island’s eroding shoreline.In a quiet bas...

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCSC) — As beach days return to the Lowcountry, a delicate balancing act is underway on the Isle of Palms, where efforts to combat coastal erosion must contend with Civil War history resting just offshore.

About a mile out in murky Atlantic waters lie the remains of ships sunk more than 160 years ago. They were part of the Union Navy’s effort to choke off Charleston during the Civil War. Today, those same wrecks are shaping how engineers restore the island’s eroding shoreline.

In a quiet basement lab at the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, toothbrushes, teacups, ceramics, bullets and even bones sit carefully cataloged in boxes.

They are artifacts recovered from blockade runners and vessels connected to what became known as the First and Second Stone Fleets.

“During the Civil War, the Union Navy instituted a blockade of Southern ports. In South Carolina, that really manifested in Charleston trying to prevent blockade runners from coming in,” James Spirek, state underwater archaeologist, said. “The blockade runners are bringing military goods and then also commercial goods, consumer goods to the South and to keep the army going.”

To strengthen the blockade, the Union purchased aging whaling and merchant vessels, filled them with stone, and deliberately sank them in key shipping channels leading into Charleston Harbor. The first fleet obstructed the main ship channel. When runners adapted, a second wave of ships was sunk off what is now the Isle of Palms.

“It was an obstacle course,” Spirek said.

Smugglers still tried to slip through the shallow beach channels. Some didn’t make it.

“The Georgiana, in this case, it’s spotted and it’s chased by the Union by and the blockade was, you know, firing heavy cannons at it. And so apparently it did disable the vessel. And then the captain, the Georgiana, wrecked onto a shoal.”

A year later, another ship, the Mary Bowers, wrecked onto the Georgiana. On sonar scans, the two form an X on the seafloor.

“And so we, you know, like to say that X truly marks the spot,” Spirek said.

Divers who first documented the wrecks in the 1960s described murky water and cargo seemingly frozen in time. When archaeologists returned decades later, visibility remained limited, sometimes only a few feet.

But even in dark water, history is visible.

“There’s still information out there and it’s amazing what can be preserved,” Spirek said.

He calls the wrecks “nonrenewable resources.”

“We’re not going to get, hopefully, another American Civil War,” Spirek said. “So these things are never going to be made or anything of that nature. So that’s why we look to preserve them.”

While history rests offshore, erosion is eating away at the island’s shoreline. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the city of Isle of Palms are planning a major beach renourishment project expected to begin this summer, with an estimated cost of $30 million.

“If we don’t restore the beaches, the erosion starts to threaten the critical infrastructure: homes, buildings, parking areas, public use areas. And then we end up with a lot of storm damage,” Steven Traynum, president of Coastal Science and Engineering, said.

Beach renourishment involves dredging sand from offshore and pumping it onto the shoreline. But not just any sand will do.

“Beach sand has to be a certain character. It’s got a certain grain size, certain color or certain texture. And we try it when we’re doing dredging projects and beach restoration. We’re trying to match the native sand as much as we possibly can,” Traynum said.

Some of the best beach-quality sand sits near the historic wreck sites.

“We’re trying to avoid the, the most critical area where we know most of the wrecks are, even though there’s some really good sand there,” Traynum said.

Removing too much sand near a wreck could destabilize it. Changing currents could scour away protective sediment, exposing fragile wood hulls to faster deterioration. To prevent that, archaeologists and engineers establish buffer zones, essentially invisible circles around known shipwrecks and magnetic anomalies.

“If it’s a known shipwreck where you know what the ship is, we put a very large buffer around that because we don’t want to get anywhere close,” Traynum explained.

Spirek says the process is rooted in federal law when federal funding is involved, requiring consultation and cultural resource surveys before dredging begins. If something significant is found, work can be adjusted.

For engineers, it’s about stewardship as much as construction.

“The worst thing we want to see is a historic artifact come through that dredge pipe,” Traynum said.

Ironically, ships once sunk to blockade Charleston are still influencing the coastline today.

Spirek notes that in previous debates over renourishment, headlines joked that the Stone Fleet was “still blockading” the coast.

More than 160 years later, the obstruction is no longer military; it’s historical.

“It’s really just a balance. I don’t see why we need to just blow through shipwrecks just because they’re in the way,” Spirek said.

Above water, waves continue their slow work of reshaping the shoreline. Below, wooden hulls rest in sand and shadow, remnants of a naval battlefield few beachgoers will ever see. The challenge for the Isle of Palms is not choosing between beach and history: it’s protecting both.

Wife of Isle of Palms paramedic warns staffing gaps could endanger emergency care

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCIV) — On the Isle of Palms, concerns among the community are growing over firefighter and paramedic staffing.The wife of an Isle of Palms paramedic is sounding the alarm about coverage during medical emergencies. She claims that if the city doesn't make changes soon, there could be serious consequences during emergencies when lives are on the line."We lost quite a few firefighters last year," said Danielle Murphy, whose husband has been a firefighter for more than a decade.R...

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCIV) — On the Isle of Palms, concerns among the community are growing over firefighter and paramedic staffing.

The wife of an Isle of Palms paramedic is sounding the alarm about coverage during medical emergencies. She claims that if the city doesn't make changes soon, there could be serious consequences during emergencies when lives are on the line.

"We lost quite a few firefighters last year," said Danielle Murphy, whose husband has been a firefighter for more than a decade.

READ MORE | "Continued seawall dispute on Isle of Palms raises environmental concerns."

According to her, when he joined the Isle of Palms Fire Department, his starting salary was low. She believes that pay is the reason for staffing shortages.

There are currently six firefighter-paramedics employed, according to the Isle of Palms city website.

Murphy, however, contends they are down to three and two more may be leaving soon for better-paying jobs.

"We have three paramedics left and that is for two different fire stations," she said.

Isle of Palms said it has three open paramedic positions. They could not confirm the current salary for those employees.

Murphy has asked the Isle of Palms City Council to reconsider its budget, but has not found much success, she said.

City officials declined to comment on the matter.

Paramedics are crucial in providing critical care that EMTs can't.

READ MORE | "Isle of the Palms weighing funding options to renourish beach."

There was a four-day stretch with no paramedics working at the fire department, Murphy said.

"This is dire and people can die," she said. "The council has constantly brushed this off."

Isle of Palms officials officals hope the current wage and competition will attract more firefighter-paramedics, they said.

Isle of Palms to bring back Ways and Means Committee

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCSC) — The City of Isle of Palms is bringing back one of their committees after a four-year hiatus.The committee had its last meeting in 2022, ceasing to meet again after the city restructured its committee system. The City Council introduced workshops as a replacement to go over projects and finances in an additional meeting before voting.Now, the council has asked the Ways and Means Committee to return so they can have a meeting strictly for finances.“Our codes allow us some flexibilit...

ISLE OF PALMS, S.C. (WCSC) — The City of Isle of Palms is bringing back one of their committees after a four-year hiatus.

The committee had its last meeting in 2022, ceasing to meet again after the city restructured its committee system. The City Council introduced workshops as a replacement to go over projects and finances in an additional meeting before voting.

Now, the council has asked the Ways and Means Committee to return so they can have a meeting strictly for finances.

“Our codes allow us some flexibility to rework our workshops and spend more time on the financial aspect of it as opposed to some of the projects or items needing approval,” Isle of Palms Mayor Philip Pounds said. “So, we’ll take those items for approval straight to a council meeting as opposed to stopping at a workshop and having some conversation.”

The committee would once again replace the workshops, meaning councilmembers would only see projects one time before voting.

Pounds believes the city has been successful with the workshop format, but said he received feedback from the council, who asked for a change.

Because of this, it’s coming back in April to give council more time to focus on project finances, such as drainage, beach restoration and road improvements.

“You know from a financial standpoint, we look at it every month,” Pounds said. ”We look at our results every month. We look at our cash position every month, but I’m very comfortable with where we sit from a budget in a reporting standpoint.”

The city has already started to restructure their meeting for a smooth transition.

The city hopes that adding back the Ways and Means committee could potentially streamline project financing, but they plan to continue to evaluate the process.

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