Skip to main content

Felix Haircare

How hair transplants actually work: the difference between FUE, DHI and FUT, who they suit, and the year-long wait for the result to grow in.
A hair transplant, from the day of surgery to the result a year on.

About Felix Haircare

For about ten years I hid it. Hats when I could get away with them, shorter cuts to make the thinning look deliberate, the same tilt of the head in every photograph so the light never caught the front. I told myself nobody noticed. Everybody noticed.

I am Felix Rowan, and Felix Haircare began the year I finally stopped managing my hair loss and did something about it. When I started reading seriously about a hair transplant, the information was a mess. Clinic sites showed flawless before-and-after shots and quoted wildly different graft numbers for the same head. Forums swung between men who had been transformed and men who said they had been ruined. The ordinary middle, the part I actually needed, was almost nowhere.

So I wrote it down from my own procedure outward, then had the medicine checked by someone who does this for a living. This site is the result: specific, honest, and clear about what surgery can and cannot do.

What this site covers

I write about restoring hair in plain language and from real experience:

I do not diagnose, rank clinics or surgeons, or handle emergencies, and nothing here replaces an in-person consultation about your own scalp.

How we keep it accurate

I am a patient, not a doctor. The clinical content on this site is reviewed by a hair-restoration surgeon, Dr Omar Haddad (MBBS, ABHRS), before it is published. The lived experience is mine; the figures on candidacy, graft counts, density, risk and recovery are signed off by someone qualified to sign them off. Our Editorial Policy explains how that works.

Get in touch

I would genuinely like to hear from anyone weighing up or recovering from a transplant. You can reach me through the Contact page. Please also read the Medical Disclaimer: this site is education and shared experience, not medical advice.