TIGI

TIGI is a brand focused on delivering well-considered products that balance quality, usability, and everyday relevance. Its approach centers on meeting real customer needs through thoughtful development, clear positioning, and dependable performance across its range.

Founded in 1986 - Contry of Origin: United Kingdom

TIGI Bestsellers

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About TIGI

TIGI is rooted in the energy of British salon culture, where technique, attitude, and image have long travelled together. The brand grew out of the Mascolo family’s world of hairdressing, closely associated with the TONI&GUY ecosystem and its emphasis on education, backstage work, and fashion-led styling. Sources differ on the exact year TIGI first took shape, but its origins are widely linked to the late 1970s and 1980s, when the idea of a “professional” product began to mean more than functional hold or shine. TIGI’s early identity was tied to hairdressers who wanted tools that matched what they were creating in the chair and on set, not generic formulas built for the broadest possible audience.

From that starting point, TIGI developed a distinctive model: products built around real-world styling demands, then supported by training and creative direction. Lines such as Bed Head helped cement a look and a voice that felt rebellious compared with the polished, uniform hair trends that dominated earlier decades. Texture, separation, flexible control, and expressive finishes became part of the brand’s language, and packaging and naming signaled that this was haircare meant to be seen, not hidden in a cabinet. Over time, TIGI’s portfolio expanded to cover the full rhythm of hair routines, from cleansing and care to finishing products that serve specific styling goals. The brand’s professional positioning has also been shaped by its global reach and later corporate ownership, which increased distribution while retaining the creative, salon-facing identity as a key differentiator.

In the current market, TIGI occupies a recognisable place between professional credibility and mainstream accessibility. It appeals to shoppers who want results that feel “salon-like” but still intuitive: products that deliver texture, movement, and control without requiring specialist knowledge. Its cultural relevance has always been linked to hair as self-expression, which keeps the brand resonant across generations that use style to signal identity. People continue to choose TIGI because it offers a clear point of view, a broad toolkit, and an ongoing association with the creative side of hairdressing rather than purely cosmetic promises.