Hairstylist ‘making the cut’ at Mecca Salon

New York City hairstylist and YouTube star Wade Lee Richards is offering a special student discount through May.

Hairstylist Wade Lee Richards recently relocated to Philadelphia. Richards said he is excited to work with a diverse clientele at Mecca Unisex Salon. | KELSEY DUBINSKY / TTN
Hairstylist Wade Lee Richards recently relocated to Philadelphia. Richards said he is excited to work with a diverse clientele at Mecca Unisex Salon. | KELSEY DUBINSKY / TTN

YouTube may seem like the promised land for free tutorials to the average college student on a tight budget, but Wade Lee Richards has relocated from the computer screen to Mecca Unisex Salon in North Philadelphia, where students can still save money to get the look they want with his hair styling deal.

Richards, the founder of the House of Wade Lee salon, which gained popularity due to the “House of Wade Lee TV” YouTube channel, relocated to Philadelphia after a suggestion of a close friend of his, another aspiring celebrity stylist named Tatiana Ward.

Ward has her own YouTube channel called “Beat Face Honey” and has recently had the opportunity to do pre-show make-up for R&B singer Brandy.

In hopes of expanding his clientele, Richards is now working at Mecca Unisex Salon, located at 1501 N. Broad St., where he does hair and make-up. He said he is inspired by his friend Ward’s newfound success and feels confident that he took a risk that will pay off in moving to the East Coast from his former home in Arizona.

Mecca Unisex Salon is right near Main Campus. Richards said the owner, Hamid Addul, and the entire Mecca staff has been incredibly welcoming, and he’s excited to “be in a position where [he] can really learn” from the other stylists in the salon, which is so busy sometimes that he described the atmosphere as being “like a club.”

“I think Mecca is an awesome opportunity for me to learn all textures of hair,” Richards said. “That’s a big reason why I’m there. Definitely the opportunity to work so closely with these Temple students and build my clientele that way is huge.”

In order to “get people in [his] chair” from the nearby community, as Richards put it, he is offering to shear down the price of hair cuts and highlights for Temple students and staff until May 30, an extension of his original deal to incorporate styling needed for commencement ceremonies and end of semester festivities this May.

He is offering $10 haircuts, including a wash and styling, and $50 full highlights, in his offer to the Temple community. Richards said that charging such rates required him to swallow some pride but said the possibility of establishing a student clientele is well worth it.

Richards decided to put in roots in Philly for the time being, previously having let his career in beauty flower all over the country. A passion for styling and fashion has taken Richards across the country, from his childhood home in Wisconsin, to Alabama, Arizona and now Philadelphia. Someday he said he hopes to establish himself in New York as a celebrity stylist.

Along with the art of styling, editorial work is something Richards said he feels is a strong point for him and would be a dream career. He is a published fashion journalist and contributes to Fashion Faces, a networking site for the fashion industry.

His significant portfolio of work in the fashion industry is largely documented on social media, which he said has been the ultimate tool to break into the fashion industry. In fact, his initial big break in the business was because of the tutorials broadcasted by “House of Wade Lee TV,” for which was noticed by organizers of the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week, an eight-day-long production boasting more than 80 designers.

“The Academy of Art University of Fashion in San Francisco saw one of my videos,” Richards said. “That’s how I really got involved with the whole fashion aspect of the beauty world.”

Attending the fashion show was an experience Richards called “a dream come true,” and he said he had hoped to be involved with high-profile fashion shows from a very young age, when he actually added pictures of previous fashion shows to an inspiration board. He was able to be a backstage video blogger for his own YouTube channel during his time at the event.

“It was unbelievable,” Richards said. “To be amongst the couture and the designers and models and [to have] the ability to learn so much.”

KELSEY DUBINSKI / TTN
KELSEY DUBINSKI / TTN

Richards had already gone from salon manager in Hunstville, Ala., where he also went to beauty school, to establishing his own salon in Phoenix. He went on to host his own fashion shows and continues working in the industry with considerably more recognition.

Life wasn’t always centered on beauty, however, for the “social media socialite,” as Richards’ House of Wade Lee website profile names him. As a teenager, Richards struggled immensely with his identity, prompting him to run away from home and join an ex-gay ministry called Love in Action in Memphis, Tenn.

“It’s definitely a different life,” Richards said. “It seems like a lifetime away, it’s not who I am today.”

His involvement with the program, which considered graduating successfully to be abandoning homosexuality, caught the attention of Tea Party politician and former Republican-candidate Christine O’Donnell, who hired Richards as a personal aid during campaigning.

Richards said he remembered the complete dismissal of both O’Donnell and Love in Action when he announced that he still had same-sex attractions and could not campaign with either party further. He is not, however, bitter about the experience – instead, he said he is ironically grateful to have the skills using social media that were largely developed during his time with O’Donnell.

“I think eventually there will be a book where I share everything,” Richards said. “It’s been a crazy, crazy journey.”

First, he said, he wants to be a successful celebrity stylist.

At the moment, growing his base clientele in Philly is Richards’ main concern, as he hopes it is the beginning of that high profile career he’s dreaming of. His current deal offered to the Temple community is what he hopes will be the kick-start of his success in this community.

“I’m not going to New York tomorrow,” Richards said. “I’m here. I need to become established.”

Erin Edinger-Turoff can be reached at erin.edinger.turoff@temple.edu. 

5 Comments

  1. Wade Lee is the best!!! He styled and colored my hair for two years before he left for Philly. Not only is he a talented stylist, but he’s a great person. Those of you with access to Wade at the Mecca Salon don’t know how lucky you are. Make an appointment with Wade, you’ll be glad you did!

  2. I had the privilege of of calling Wade my stylist for several years before his recent move to Philly, his passion and devotion to transforming you into the best possible version of your self is electric! Miss him here in AZ!! What an amazing deal that you are offering Wade! Book those appointments temple students/staff, you’ve hit the jackpot!!

  3. To Book Your Appointment with Wade Lee please call or text 623-237-1890
    Follow The House of Wade Lee on Instagram @thehouseofwadelee

  4. Wade is an amazing man! He was not just mine and my daughter’s hair stylist, but also is a dear friend. We met Wade a few years back in AZ through a hair cut deal and fell in love with him, we were so ecstatic when he opened his own salon right by our house! Wade has so much heart and passion for what he does and he is the best we have ever found thus far. When we moved to Indiana, we really missed Wade. Now he is in Philly and we are so proud of him and his leap of faith! Such a big step that is paying off for him, anyone that has the opportunity to meet him and have him as their stylist and friend is very lucky. We love you Wade! Keep living your dreams! Plus now that we are on the same coast line again Bryttani and I will be finding a way to get to see you, promise! Love you!

  5. He was our stylist for years. He was the only one able style my hubby’s thick curly hair. Guys – don’t shy away from him.. He was the only I trusted to cut and color my hair anyway he wanted. We miss him. I may not cut my hair until I go back to the PA area next year. He’s the best!

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