1 / 23

Chapter 2: Spa Equipment and Products

Chapter 2: Spa Equipment and Products. Dry Room Equipment. Massage tables Padding—single/multiple layer, soft/firm Covers—usually vinyl Accessories Shelves and extenders Sit-up features and bolsters Stools for therapist and clients. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.). Basic linens

nabell
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 2: Spa Equipment and Products

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2:Spa Equipment and Products

  2. Dry Room Equipment • Massage tables • Padding—single/multiple layer, soft/firm • Covers—usually vinyl • Accessories • Shelves and extenders • Sit-up features and bolsters • Stools for therapist and clients

  3. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Basic linens • Massage sheets—various materials and colors • Face cradle and bolster covers—enhance sanitation • Towels—warmth, draping, product removal • Blankets—warmth, nurturing • Linen storage—closed container

  4. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Hot towel heating units • Hot towel cabinet (cabbi)—6- to 72-towel units • Hydrocollator—towels and sheets • Hot stone heater—lower cost alternative • Soda cooler—easily kept near the treatment table

  5. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Product warmers • For lotion, stones, seaweed, mud, and so forth • Never microwave • Treatment bars are expensive but handy. • Paraffin warmers • Professional unit preferred • Accurate temperature control important

  6. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Body wrap materials • Heavy wool blankets—detoxification wraps • Thermal “space” blankets—prevent loss of body heat • Wrap sheets—hot or cold wet wraps (never flannel) • Body wrap plastic and Mylar—for messy products

  7. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Body-warming equipment • Heat lamps—hanging and freestanding • Electric table warmers—heat sheets pretreatment • Table pads—extra softness and warmth • Fomentek water bottles—lie flat on treatment table • Microwavable packs—external heat during treatment • Booties and mitts—electric or microwavable

  8. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Spa clothing • Comfort and modesty • Disposable undergarments • Robes and slippers • Hair protectors

  9. Dry Room Equipment—(cont.) • Other dry room supplies • Reference library—dictionary, drug books, Internet • Clock—stay on schedule, monitor application times • Storage area—extra supplies and soiled materials • Wastebasket—foot pedal operation • Music system—relaxation and enjoyment

  10. Wet Room Equipment • Tubs • Foot soaking—simple basins to full pedicure stations • Soaking—high sided and roomy • Whirlpool —massaging jets of water • Hydrotherapy • Primary type of tub in spa setting • Air and water jets

  11. Wet Room Equipment—(cont.) • Showers • Handheld shower and wet table—product removal • Standard—less costly, less control • Swiss—multiple jets of water surround client • Vichy—rain-like; product removal and treatment • Scotch hose—strong stream of water for therapy

  12. Wet Room Equipment—(cont.) • Specialized environments • Steam room—sweating; aid respiratory conditions • Steam shower—shower-like steam room • Steam cabinet—promote product absorption • Steam canopy—detoxification, product absorption • Sauna—perspiration for detoxification

  13. Wet Room Equipment—(cont.) • Guidelines for purchasing and maintaining equipment • Durability—Professional equipment lasts longer. • Manufacturer—years in business, warranties • Consumer reports—experiences of credible users • Return on investment—Consider payoff time.

  14. Spa Product Categories • Cleansers—remove impurities, prepare for treatment • Toners/astringents—complete cleaning, restore pH • Exfoliants—remove trapped debris, smooth, stimulate • Treatment products • Sometimes called “masks” • Usually applied for specific purpose or treatment goal • May benefit muscles, reduce stress, or increase energy

  15. Spa Product Categories—(cont.) • Moisturizers—usually applied at the end of a session • Occlusives—reduce moisture loss • Humectants—hydrate skin • Emollients—restore oil

  16. Important Spa Product Terms • pH—level of acidity (below 7) or alkalinity (above 7) • Antioxidants—prevent cell/DNA damage by free radicals • Botanicals—plant extracts used for therapy • Fragrances—enhance smell, naturally or synthetically • Natural ingredients • “Natural” not regulated in cosmetic industry • Natural products often contain synthetic ingredients .

  17. Know the Products You Use • Try products before using with a client. • See if a product can be removed easily. • Determine if a plastic cover is needed for moisture. • Practice transitions from one product to the next.

  18. Creating a Spa Environment • What clients see • Color—impact on behavior; cultural appropriateness • Window treatments—privacy, light, style • Lighting—dim for work, bright for cleaning • Walls—artwork to medical information • Decorative items—shelves, tables, baskets, and so forth

  19. Creating a Spa Environment—(cont.) • What clients hear • Footsteps (annoying echoes from hard floors?) • Music—should be therapeutic and relaxing • What clients smell • Ambient odors from treatment products, smoke • Therapist’s scented products, breath

  20. Creating a Spa Environment—(cont.) • What clients taste • Water available before, during, and after treatment • Posttreatment snacks for nourishment • What clients feel • Heat and cold • Textures • Therapist’s hands

  21. Spa Accessibility and Functionality • Entrance and reception—accessible, friendly, neat • Undressing/dressing space—private, secure • Bathroom—with cleaning and grooming products

  22. Planning a Spa Treatment Room • Design for the type(s) of treatment • Flexible • Cost-effective

  23. Chapter 2 Wrap-Up • Convey professionalism. • Quality equipment • Quality lubricants and other spa products • Tasteful interior design • Visit spa shows for demonstrations. • Have a clear and informed plan.

More Related