Granville Barbershop, North Carolina
A Traditional American Barbershop Documented Through Photography
The Granville Barbershop in Grannville, North Carolina is the kind of place that has quietly served its community for decades. No branding overhaul. No attempt to modernize what already works. Just a steady rhythm of haircuts, conversation, and routine that has outlasted trends and redevelopment cycles.
These photographs were made as part of my long-term documentary project, Barbershops of America — an ongoing effort to photograph traditional barbershops across the United States before they disappear. Shops like this are not just businesses; they are cultural fixtures that anchor small towns and neighborhoods.
Why Traditional Barbershops Matter
Traditional barbershops play a unique role in American life. They are spaces built on trust and repetition — places where people return month after month, year after year, to see the same barber in the same chair.
In small towns especially, barbershops function as informal community centers. News is exchanged. Silence is respected. Generations overlap. These are the kinds of everyday environments that rarely feel important in the moment, yet become deeply significant once they’re gone.
Photographing these spaces is about preservation, not nostalgia — recording them honestly, as they exist, without staging or intervention.
The Story
These photographs were made during a drive home to upstate NY for Christmas. The owner was very skeptical of my intentions at first but agreed to let me photograph his shop. During my time there I had some fun interactions with customers, but he never said much. As far as history goes, the shop opened in the 1940’s, and prior to that it was an African American movie theater!! How’s that for Southern?
As with most old shops, the relationship between proprietor and those in his chair was easy, fluid, and quite candid. At one point an older gentleman sauntered in with his head down, dropped a gift on an empty chair, turned back toward the door and said “well, gotta go”. That was it. No interaction. Never even lifted his head up to make eye contact. The barber didn’t seem surprised, nor did he skip a beat on the haircut in progress.
Took about a half hour until I was pleased with the pictures made. Afterward I gave the barber a card and thanked him for the hospitality. He stopped cutting, grabbed a few coins off the back bar, placed them in my hand and in an almost too good to be true accent said “take these two qwwwaaaaaaaatehs back to that machine and get you a pop. I’ll bet you haven’t had a 50 cent pop in yeeeeaaaaaaahs.” Sure enough, there were ice cold sodas coming out of a vintage Coca Cola machine against the back wall. Can’t tell you the last time I even had the desire for a soda, but I wasn’t about to turn that one down.
Interactions like these are what keep Barbershops of America going. Talking to people that give you a very definitive sense of place is gratifying, educational, and fun. Hearing about the shops history in such a dialect not only tells you where you are in the world, but also where you aren’t. I love that.
Continue exploring documentary barbershop photography in the Barbershops of America series
Barbershop Photography Gallery
Another Barbershop Photo Essay
Contact me directly about barbershop photography licensing for your editorial and commercial projects -rob@robhammerphotography.com
The interior of Granville Barbershop reveals layers of personal history, from worn barber chairs to walls filled with service flags and memorabilia.
A working barber trims a longtime client inside a traditional North Carolina barbershop, where routine and familiarity define the space.
The storefront of Granville Barbershop in Granville, North Carolina, a long-standing fixture of the town’s Main Street.
Inside the shop, haircuts continue as they have for decades—unhurried, familiar, and grounded in routine.
A handmade walking stick rests beside a customer, a small detail that hints at the personal histories carried into the shop.