As previously discussed these shears have individually serrated edges and the primary job of this tool is to create layers in a dog's coat. The job here is to blend transitional like when you do a shorter body and longer hair and blend the legs to the body. When you are done with the straight scissors you can use thinning scissors for shooting out the area. You can also use this to fix mistakes in the hair you made with the straight scissors. Start with one dedicated section and move forward with quick cuts and only remove a small amount of hair and then you go around and around on that area you see uneven.
Curved scissors
Curved dog grooming scissors are designed to produce curves and to add a finish to a curved area on the dog. Places that lend themselves to being trimmed with curved scissors area heads, ribcages, back leg angulation, legs, and feet. If you have been trimming a round shape using a straight scissor you must be aware that the curve of the blade does the shaping for you and if you overturn the scissor you may take off too much coat. Inverting curved scissors can make it easier to add a shape into the bend in a back leg or to set the neck at the top line.
The best-curved scissors have longer blades so you can work more effectively than shears with a shorter blade. The reason being longer blades cut bigger longer areas of hair and you can work faster and make fewer cuts to achieve the same results. They also have a slight curve that forms well with the body of your pet.

