Patsy's Barbershop: A Barbershop That Still Feels Like a Barbershop

Inside One of Albany's Most Classic Barbershops

I grew up just outside Albany, New York.

While Albany wasn't technically my hometown, it was where I learned my way around the world beyond the small town where I was raised. For years, I thought I knew the city pretty well.

Yet somehow I never stepped inside Patsy's Barbershop.

By the time I finally photographed the shop, I was already thirteen (2024) years into the Barbershops of America project and had documented hundreds of barbershops across all 50 states. I had photographed shops in major cities, tiny rural towns, and everywhere in between. What I didn't expect was to find one of the most visually striking traditional barbershops in America just a few miles from where I grew up.

That's one of the things I've learned from this project. Some of the most remarkable places aren't found across the country. They're hiding in plain sight.

Patsy's Barbershop is one of those places.

Photograph of a beautiful traditional barbershop in Albany, NY

Traditional barbershop in Albany, NY

A Hidden Institution in Downtown Albany

For generations, Patsy's has served an unusually diverse cross-section of Albany.

Governors and state legislators have sat in the same chairs as construction workers, tradesmen, state employees, lawyers, small business owners, and lifelong residents of New York's capital city. Few businesses naturally bring together people from such different walks of life, but traditional barbershops have always been an exception.

The clientele reflects Albany itself.

As the seat of New York State government, Albany has long been a city where politics, public service, business, and blue-collar work intersect. Patsy's sits comfortably at the center of that world, quietly serving customers without fanfare while becoming part of the daily rhythm of the city.

What makes the shop remarkable, however, isn't just who walks through the door.

It's the space itself.

Barber giving a straight razor shave at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

A straight razor shave takes place inside Patsy’s Barbershop, surrounded by the shop’s preserved interior.

An Interior From Another Era

The moment you step inside Patsy's, it's clear that you're looking at something increasingly rare.

Dark wood paneling stretches the length of the shop. Built-in waiting benches line the walls beneath a series of geometric mirrors that feel lifted from another era of American design. The green-and-white tile floor, vintage barber chairs, old clocks, display cabinets, and original fixtures create an environment that feels almost untouched by time.

Many historic barbershops survive in name only. Over the decades, renovations replace original features, interiors become modernized, and the character that once defined the space slowly disappears.

Patsy's is different.

The shop doesn't feel vintage because someone intentionally recreated the look. It feels authentic because it never stopped being what it was.

The waiting area alone is enough to stop visitors in their tracks. The woodwork, individual seating sections, and Art Deco-inspired mirrors create one of the most distinctive barbershop interiors I've encountered anywhere in the country.

After photographing hundreds of shops, that's not something I say lightly.

Traditional Barbering Still Matters

What makes Patsy's especially compelling is that it isn't a museum.

The shop remains a working business, and the traditions that shaped it continue to play a role in daily life.

Hot towels still find their way across customers' faces. Straight razors are still used with care and precision. Haircuts aren't rushed. Attention to detail still matters.

At the same time, the current generation of barbers has brought its own personality to the shop.

The contrast is striking. A barber with tattoos and a contemporary style works beneath mirrors and woodwork that have been part of the shop for decades. The visual difference between past and present is obvious, yet it never feels out of place.

Instead, it feels like the natural evolution of a healthy business.

The shop respects its history without becoming trapped by it.

Green and white tile floor with vintage barber chairs at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

Green-and-white tile, built-in benches, and vintage barber chairs define the preserved interior of Patsy’s Barbershop.

A Barbershop That Still Feels Like a Barbershop

One thing I've noticed while documenting barbershops across America is that the rarest shops aren't necessarily the oldest.

The rarest shops are the ones that have managed to remain useful.

They continue serving their communities. They adapt when necessary. New generations step behind the chairs while preserving the qualities that made the shop important in the first place.

Patsy's embodies that balance.

The woodwork remains. The tile floor remains. The chairs remain. The atmosphere remains.

Most importantly, people still walk through the door every day for the same reason they always have.

To get a haircut.

To sit for a shave.

To take part in a tradition that has quietly connected generations of Americans.

After thirteen years of photographing barbershops across the country, finding a place like Patsy's so close to home was a reminder that remarkable places don't always announce themselves.

Sometimes they've been there all along, waiting for you to notice them.

And sometimes they still feel exactly like a barbershop should.

Client reclined with a hot towel over his face at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

A hot towel rests over a client’s face during a shave at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany, New York.

Part of the Barbershops of America Project

Patsy's Barbershop is one of hundreds of barbershops photographed for the Barbershops of America project, a long-term documentary effort exploring traditional barbershops and barber culture across all fifty states.

Over the last fifteen years, the project has documented everything from century-old neighborhood shops and Black barbershops to modern traditional shops helping shape a new generation of American barbering. Many of the businesses photographed have since closed, making these images an increasingly valuable record of a disappearing part of American culture.

Patsy's stands out as one of the finest traditional interiors in the entire project—a reminder that some of the country's most remarkable barbershops are often found in unexpected places.

Explore the Barbershops of America photography book + prints

View the full Barbershops of America gallery

Barber standing with clippers beside a client at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

Inside Patsy’s Barbershop, the barber and client are reflected among the shop’s wood paneling and geometric mirrors.

Barber giving a shave inside the classic interior of Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

Near the front window of Patsy’s Barbershop, a client sits is serviced as the shop’s vintage mirrors, chairs, and patterned tile fill the frame.

More Traditional Barbershop Stories

If you're interested in classic American barbershops, you may also enjoy:

Each shop reflects a different chapter of American barber culture while sharing the traditions that have made barbershops such an enduring part of community life.

Barber moving between the sink and chair during a service at Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany New York

A barber reaches back to get hot shaving cream during a service at Patsy’s Barbershop.

Black and white photograph of Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany, NY

Shane's Barbershop - San Mateo, CA

Shane’s Barbershop, San Mateo

A Standard That Hasn’t Been Matched

There was a time when if you cared about getting a proper haircut in San Mateo, you knew exactly where to go.

Shane’s Barbershop didn’t run on normal hours. The lights were on at 3:00 in the morning. Guys heading to work, early shifts, long days—they could count on Shane being there before most of the city was even awake. That alone set him apart. But it wasn’t the reason people kept coming back.

The work did that.

Shane Nesbitt built a reputation the hard way—one cut at a time, day after day, year after year. His standards were high, and he didn’t bend them. There was a level of consistency to what he did that a lot of shops never reach. Clean fades, sharp lines, no shortcuts. You sat in his chair, you knew what you were getting.

And other barbers paid attention.

Shane was, and still is, a reference point—someone peers and younger barbers looked to, whether they realized it or not. The kind of barber who quietly raises the bar for everyone else in the room. Not by talking about it, but by showing up and doing the work.

A Shop Built on Culture

Shane’s Barbershop was curated, but not overdone. It felt lived in. And a natural extension of Shane’s life.

There was a strong undercurrent of skateboard culture in the space—something that came through in the details more than anything obvious. The music, the energy, the way people moved through the shop. It wasn’t trying to be anything. It just was.

That mattered.

Because the best barbershops aren’t built around aesthetics or trends. They’re built around identity. Around the people who spend their time there. Around the conversations, the routines, the repetition of daily life.

Shane’s shop had that.

It was a place where working people came through the door, where time moved a little differently, where the day started early and didn’t slow down until it was done.

The Hours, The Work, The Reputation

Opening at 3:00am isn’t something you do for show.

It’s a reflection of who you are and who you’re there for.

Shane understood his customers—guys who didn’t have the luxury of showing up midday, who needed to be in and out before the rest of their day started. That schedule built a kind of loyalty you can’t manufacture.

And over time, that kind of consistency turns into something else.

Respect.

Not just from customers, but from other barbers. From people who know how hard it is to maintain that level of work, that kind of schedule, that kind of focus over years.

Shane was ahead of his time. He was the first barber to become a brand - selling t-shirts, stickers, even his own custom branded straight razors. Nobody else was doing that. Most importantly though, Shane knew that he was there to serve. A lot of barbers these days have giant egos and think their clients don’t deserve to sit in the chair. Yet despite Shane’s status, he knew he was there for the customer!

A Barbershop That’s No Longer There

The shop is closed now.

Things change. Life moves on. That’s part of it.

But places like Shane’s don’t just disappear. They stick with the people who spent time there. In the routines. In the stories. In the way other barbers approach their own work after seeing what was possible.

For a lot of people, Shane Nesbitt wasn’t just another barber.

He was the blueprint.

Part of a Larger Archive

This set of photographs is part of a long-term project documenting barbershops across America—places like this that define their communities, shape local culture, and, in many cases, quietly disappear over time.

Some shops are still open. Others, like Shane’s, live on through the people who remember them.

If you’ve spent enough time in barbershops, you know the difference between a place that cuts hair and a place that means something.

Shane’s was the latter.

Explore the Barbershops of America gallery

Read another barbershop story - Spanky’s Barbershop - Covington, KY

View Barbershop Prints + Photo Book

view through window into Shane's Barbershop San Mateo with barber cutting hair and campaign sign in foreground

View into Shane's Barbershop in San Mateo capturing everyday life inside the shop from the street

interior of Shane's Barbershop San Mateo with barber hugging client and tattoo artwork walls

Barber Shane Nesbitt shares a moment with a client inside his San Mateo shop surrounded by tattoo art and personal memorabilia

barber Shane Nesbitt giving detailed haircut to client inside Shane's Barbershop San Mateo

California barber Shane Nesbitt focuses on precision haircut inside Shane's Barbershop in San Mateo

Black and white portrait of barber Shane Nesbitt wearing glasses and a beanie, San Mateo California

Shane Nesbitt, photographed in his San Mateo barbershop. For years, he set the standard—opening before dawn, cutting hair for working people, and building a reputation that reached far beyond the shop itself.

barber working through mirror covered in stickers inside Shane's Barbershop San Mateo

Barber Shane Nesbitt works through a sticker-covered mirror reflecting the layered skateboard culture inside his San Mateo shop

hearse with Shane's Barbershop lettering parked outside at night San Mateo

California custom hearse with Shane's Barbershop branding parked outside at night reflecting the personality of the shop

client with tattooed head getting haircut inside Shane's Barbershop San Mateo

Close-up of Shane’s tattooed head receiving a haircut highlighting the detail and individuality inside Shane's Barbershop

barber Shane Nesbitt cutting hair in vintage barber chair inside Shane's Barbershop San Mateo

Wide view of Shane Nesbitt cutting hair in his San Mateo barbershop surrounded by artwork and classic barber chairs

Checkerboard Vans shoes standing on barbershop floor with hair clippings and electrical cords

Hair on the floor, cords underfoot, and long days on your feet—details like this are what defined the rhythm inside Shane’s Barbershop.

straight razor shave on tattooed head inside Shane's Barbershop San Mateo

Close-up of straight razor shave highlighting the craftsmanship and trust inside Shane's Barbershop in San Mateo

empty interior of Shane's Barbershop San Mateo with barber chairs and artwork on walls

Interior of Shane's Barbershop in San Mateo showing the space that once served its community