Jhonny Silvestre cuts Erick Ramirez’s hair. Ramirez is a longtime client of the Vasquez Barber Shop in Cambridgeโ€™s Wellington-Harrington neighborhood.

The buzz of clippers blends with the rhythms of Latin music at Vasquez Barber Shop, where the chairs are almost always occupied.

Angel Nunez, 16, a high school junior, discovered Vasquez five years ago when he moved to the area. He liked the low fade shop co-owner Andy Matias gave him and introduced his younger brother to the shop.

โ€œHe was the best, so I just kept going back,โ€ Nunez said of Matias.

Nunezโ€™s friends noticed his haircut and started going there too. Now they sometimes coordinate appointments so they can get their hair cut together. Last fall Nunez and a few of his soccer teammates got matching cuts.

โ€œWe all got buzz cuts for the high school season,โ€ he said.

Making moves

Andrรฉs Rodrรญguez and Hailey Estrella cut their customers’ hair. The men are two of the nine barbers at Vasquez Barber Shop.

Edwin Vasquez opened the barber shop in 2012 on Hampshire Street and ran it there for five years. In 2017 he sold it to Matias and Jhonny Silvestre, who moved it to its current location a quarter-mile away on Cambridge Street.

Silvestre, 34, and Matias, 33, grew up as neighbors and friends in Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic. Silvestre immigrated with his family to Cambridge in 2012 in search of financial opportunities, and Matias followed in 2017 in search of opportunities and to join his wife and son.

For Silvestre, the barbershop was more than just a business โ€“ it was a way to build a future in a new country while enjoying the independence of being his own boss. Both men had begun cutting hair in the Dominican Republic.

The shop is cozy, with minimalist decor, sleek gray and black tones and nine barber chairs arranged close together. Hairspray and cologne perfume the air. The buzzing of clippers and the snipping of scissors fill the space. The barbers are tidying up constantly, sweeping the floor and using blow dryers to round up stray hair, keeping the shop inviting throughout the day.

A โ€œneighborhood epicenterโ€

A longtime patron describes the shop as a โ€œneighborhood epicenterโ€ where customers reconnect with friends and make new ones.

Erick Ramirez, 28, has been coming to the barber shop since high school, trusting Silvestre with his haircuts for more than a decade.

โ€œMy friend put me onto him, but my friend got put on by another friend โ€“ it was like a friend chain,โ€ said Ramirez, a valet attendant who lives in Boston.

Ramirezโ€™s taste in hairstyles has evolved over the years, and he has trusted Silvestre to guide the transitions โ€“ from โ€œa big โ€™froโ€ to braids and now a shorter cut.

โ€œAt this point heโ€™s not even my barber โ€“ he is like my brother now,โ€ he said. The two share a love for โ€œDominican softballโ€ and play on the Truenos (โ€œThunderโ€), a recreational team started by Matias.

Franklin Sanchez, 53, of Cambridge, was drawn to the shop when it first opened, excited to see it owned by people from his home country. Heโ€™s stayed a customer from one location to the next.

โ€œSince I met them over there theyโ€™ve been so helpful for the community,โ€ Sanchez said.

College kids and families too

Andy Matias trims a client’s hair. Matias is co-owner of Vasquez Barber Shop on Cambridge Street in Cambridge.

Students from nearby schools, including Harvard and MIT, visit the shop regularly for haircuts.

Karen Flores, a Cambridge resident, has been bringing her two young sons for haircuts for the past two years after learning about the place from a cousin. She said her toddler doesnโ€™t react well to the electric razor.

โ€œHe usually has an issue with the machines,โ€ Flores said. โ€œHe doesnโ€™t like them, like most babies.โ€ย 

Vasquez barbers have the touch, though: One cutting the young childโ€™s hair as he wiggled in the seat, sometimes causing the seat to spin, handed the boy a blue comb to distract him. That kept the child still enough to get through the haircut.

For Silvestre and Matias, their community hub is only the beginning. Vasquez Barber Shop opened a second location in 2020 in Watertown, where five barbers work, and the owners are readying a third in Cambridge โ€“ at the original spot on Hampshire Street. Silvestre and Matias hope to open across Massachusetts.

โ€œI want more for the barber shop,โ€ Matias said. โ€œHopefully three or four more.โ€

Vasquez Barber Shop, 1052 Cambridge St., Wellington-Harrington, Cambridge


This story is part of a partnership between Cambridge Day and the Boston University Department of Journalism.

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